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Ku Klux Klan - A Secret History

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    -[fire crackling]
    -[people yelling]
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    [KKK Member]
    They're preaching to our kids
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    in schools these black
    savages are our equals,
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    they're our brothers and sisters.
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    I tell 'em they're crazy.
    We're white people.
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    We're standing up for our white rights!
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    The Klan is the only organization
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    that stands up for the white rights!
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    [people yelling in agreement]
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    [KKK Member]
    White power! White power!
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    White power!
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    The Klan is the country's
    oldest terrorist organization.
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    It's engaged in murder,
    intimidation, violence,
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    rape, pillage, the worst kinds of crimes.
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    [Narrator]
    The history of the Ku Klux Klan
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    is a chronicle of hate in America.
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    The legacy of the Ku Klux Klan
    has been white terrorism.
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    We've had a lot of
    hangings, a lot of bombings,
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    a lot of shootings.
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    That don't bother me at all.
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    [Narrator]
    The story of the Klan is one
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    of secrecy, ritual, and misconception.
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    It was founded as a
    purely social fraternity,
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    very much like a college fraternity,
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    purely as a source of amusement.
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    [crowd yelling]
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    [Narrator]
    It wrapped itself in the sacred cloth
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    of Christianity and the hallowed fabric
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    of the American flag,
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    becoming the great fraternal
    organization of the 1920s.
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    You had governors and senators
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    and legislators elected
    with the Klan's blessing,
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    and you also had Chief Justice Black
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    of the U.S. Supreme court.
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    He joined the Klan because
    he felt it was necessary.
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    [Narrator]
    It resurrected itself
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    to combat the civil rights movement
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    and launched a violent revolt
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    against the on-rushing
    tide of black equality.
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    Its leaders sought to mask the terror,
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    but the face of intolerance
    has always dwelled
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    behind the hood.
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    [Narrator] They are a part
    of American history we
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    would like to forget, but we cannot.
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    [gunshot blasts]
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    -We should not.
    -Hey, come on and help us!
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    Today, you can see a number of groups
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    who are like the Klansmen,
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    but they simply are not
    wearing the white sheets.
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    -[tense dramatic music]
    -[flames roar]
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    [Narrator]
    "The Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History."
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    -[flames crackling]
    -[discordant tense music]
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    [vehicles humming]
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    [Man]
    White power.
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    White power!
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    [muffled shouting]
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    -[tense music]
    -[muffled speaking]
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    That's it, gentlemen. Ku Klux Klan.
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    White power.
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    Down the lines, two rows!
    Get your line down.
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    [muffled speaking]
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    [Man On Loudspeaker]
    Okay, couple people get that banner.
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    We've got to go, and
    somebody's got to carry it.
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    [Man]
    White power!
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    [Narrator]
    At rallies across America,
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    the Ku Klux Klan assembles
    to preach its gospel
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    of white supremacy.
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    Good morning, Dobson!
    We are the Ku Klux Klan!
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    We hate niggers, we hate Jews,
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    we hate faggots, and we hate spics!
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    [Klansmen]
    White power!
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    We don't have to have
    a reason to hate 'em!
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    Just because it breathe,
    we hate the filthy bums!
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    You people need to get
    off your ass and wake up!
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    This is America.
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    The niggers are taking
    it over and the Jews.
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    Make a stand, join the Klan.
    White power!
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    [klansmen yelling]
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    And I hate Jews. I hate
    'em because they exist.
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    I hate 'em because they breed.
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    I hate em because they're scum.
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    The goddamn niggers are
    the scum of the earth.
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    White power!
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    -White power!
    -White power!
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    [Narrator]
    Today, the combustible discourse
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    of the Klan plays to sparse crowds.
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    [Klansman]
    Into this country.
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    [Narrator]
    But there was a time when millions
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    of Americans embraced the
    ideology of the Invisible Empire,
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    [slow tense blues rock music]
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    a time when scores of men,
    women, and children bowed down
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    in a sacred oath of allegiance
    to the hooded order,
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    an oath virtually unchanged
    for over 130 years.
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    The heart of the Klan creed
    has always been the separation
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    and purity of the white race.
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    [flames crackle and roar]
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    They wanna throw white children
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    and colored children into the
    melting pot of integration,
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    throughout of which will
    come a conglomerated,
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    Mulatta mongrel type of people!
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    -[slow dramatic music]
    -[flames crackle]
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    Times have changed.
    The message has not.
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    That's right. Look out, nigger!
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    The Klan is getting bigger.
    White power!
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    [Klansmen]
    White power!
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    [Narrator]
    Since its inception,
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    the Klan has risen to
    battle enemies perceived
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    as a threat to the white race
    to battle issues the Klan saw
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    as disruptive to the proper social order.
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    [slow tense blues rock music]
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    They say it's hate and racist.
    Racist is psychological.
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    I guess everybody's
    racist one way or another.
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    There is some hate, animosity.
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    We don't like what the
    government's doing to us.
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    They're cutting down a white race.
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    [Narrator]
    But the Klan is more complex
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    than a simple diatribe of racial hatred.
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    Men and women join for
    a sense of belonging,
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    a sense of ritual,
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    [muffled speaking]
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    a sense of kinship.
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    A Klansman swears to his
    God, race, and nation,
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    and when he takes an oath,
    he takes oath for his brothers.
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    This is my blood.
    This is my family.
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    What you see here, what
    you see here is my people.
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    This is my blood. This is my race.
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    These are my brothers right
    here, man, right here.
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    And I gotta say, I love
    the state of Florida.
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    [Narrator]
    The devotion to their own
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    is based on a common bond,
    a common philosophy,
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    a precept of exclusion.
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    [tense music]
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    It is a bond that brings
    Klan families together
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    in social gatherings not unlike
    those other families enjoy.
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    -[muffled speaking]
    -[barbecue sizzles]
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    But these affairs are different.
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    They possess the undercurrent that has run
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    through every era of Klan activity,
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    the threat of intimidation, of violence.
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    I don't care what we gotta do.
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    If you come after me, I'll
    kill ya in plain, flat words.
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    You mess with me, I'll kill ya.
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    You come after a member of
    my family, I'll kill ya.
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    I'm not against using anything,
    any means,
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    and any way in order to get our message
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    and our views across,
    whatever means necessary.
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    [Narrator]
    From its birth,
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    the Klan has claimed to
    be a defender of virtue,
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    the protector of white womanhood,
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    the champion of Christian morals.
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    Masking itself in religion,
    the Klans stole the holiest
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    of Christian symbols
    and made it their own.
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    Since 1915, the burning of the cross
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    has been a sacred Klan ceremony.
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    [flames crackle]
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    A lot of people say, "Well,
    you're burning a cross.
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    That's disgracing God."
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    That ain't disgracing God.
    We don't burn 'em.
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    We light 'em for the glorify
    the light of Jesus Christ
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    to come back from the
    world of darkness to light.
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    That's the reason we light 'em.
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    -[tense brooding music]
    -[muffled speaking]
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    [Narrator]
    The cross lighting ceremony is a mix
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    of ritual, religion, and racial rambling.
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    [Klansman]
    It is dark now.
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    Out of the darkness comes the light.
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    The whole world does
    not understand the Klan.
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    They have mess about it.
    They have misunderstanding.
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    We are for the white race,
    the white race only.
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    As you see, one light
    becomes many lights,
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    the eternal light, the eternal
    light of the Ku Klux Klan!
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    [muffled speaking]
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    [Klansman With Fire]
    Do you choose to accept the light?
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    [Klansman]
    Yes, sir.
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    [muffled speaking]
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    No niggers, no parasitic,
    bloodsucking Jews,
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    just white people, damn
    mad white people with fire.
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    That's what it's all about.
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    -For God!
    -For God!
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    -For the white race!
    -For the white race!
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    -For our children!
    -For our children!
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    For the American knights
    of the Ku Klux Klan!
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    [Unison] For the American
    knights of the Ku Klux Klan!
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    [Narrator]
    The Klan crosses are ignited
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    to the sound of one of
    the holiest of Christian hymns.
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    -[flames roar]
    -["Amazing Grace"]
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    The cross is the most
    distinct symbol in the world.
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    Everybody knows what a cross is, okay?
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    We light it, so when it's lit,
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    the light upon Jesus Christ shines out
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    upon the Klan and blesses 'em.
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    [Klansman]
    That these crosses burn into your souls
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    as they have so many other people.
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    That's why we're here, folks.
    Fire in the night.
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    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
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    -[cannons and muskets blasting]
    -["Taps"]
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    [Narrator]
    In the aftermath of the Civil War,
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    much of the South lay in ruins.
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    Confederate soldiers returned home
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    to find the landscape ravaged.
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    It was in this atmosphere of despair
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    that six Confederate veterans
    gathered at a local law office
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    in the poverty-stricken
    town of Pulaski, Tennessee.
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    -[muffled speaking]
    -[hooves clopping]
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    On a June night in 1866,
    the Ku Klux Klan was born.
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    Surprisingly, the origins
    of the Klan had little
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    to do with the menacing behavior
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    for which it would become known.
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    -[horse neighs and sputters]
    -[tense music]
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    It was founded as a
    purely social fraternity,
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    very much like a college
    fraternity but without the college,
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    purely as a source of amusement.
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    [Narrator]
    Using the home of a prominent Pulaski citizen
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    as a meeting place, the
    founders were bursting
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    with ideas for the new
    brotherhood they had formed.
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    They were college men,
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    and college students learn
    their Greek and Latin,
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    and so they picked a Greek word,
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    [speaks in foreign language]
    meaning circle,
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    and found it had great
    alliterative possibilities,
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    added Klan to it.
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    Ku Klux Klan. Isn't
    that a wonderful sound?
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    [slow tense discordant music]
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    [Narrator]
    To further the mystery,
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    the founders decreed that
    all public appearances
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    were to be made in disguise.
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    Outlandish costumes
    consisting of flowing sheets,
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    masks, and hats were devised.
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    Absurd-sounding titles
    such as Grand Cyclops
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    and Grand Magi were
    created for office holders.
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    New members were to be called ghouls.
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    The founders presented themselves
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    to the town with theatrical flair.
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    The site of costumed men
    parading through the streets
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    of Pulaski piqued curiosity.
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    Local men were quick to join.
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    As the Klan grew, mysterious
    night rides began.
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    The early rides took on
    a supernatural aspect.
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    Attempting to frighten newly freed slaves,
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    hooded Klansmen claimed to be
    ghosts of Confederate dead.
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    At first, the night rides
    produced little violence,
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    but that would change as new Klan leaders
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    realized the hooded order might
    be used to wage a secret war
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    against the Yankee
    governments of Reconstruction.
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    [birds chirping]
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    Before the Civil War,
    generations of white Southerners
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    had been raised on the
    principles of white supremacy.
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    It was an ideal that
    neither military defeat
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    nor the abolishment of
    slavery could destroy.
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    [tense somber music]
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    At war's end, Southern state
    legislatures passed measures
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    designed to maintain white superiority.
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    These laws, known as black codes,
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    severely curtailed the newly
    freed slaves' civil rights,
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    in effect returning them
    to a state of bondage
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    and making them second-class citizens.
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    [congregation yelling]
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    In response, angry
    congressional Republicans
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    passed the Reconstruction Act
    of 1867, a strict set of laws
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    which temporarily abolished
    Southern state governments,
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    divided the South into military districts,
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    and gave blacks the right to vote.
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    The defeated South again felt
    invaded by Northern authority.
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    [crowd yelling angrily]
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    White supremacy was threatened.
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    [hooves clopping]
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    Soon after passage of
    the Reconstruction Act,
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    Klan leaders from all
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    of Tennessee held a secret
    meeting in Nashville.
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    The man granted control of the Klan
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    was Nathan Bedford Forrest,
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    former Confederate general
    and outspoken critic
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    of Republican Reconstruction.
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    By spring of 1868, the Klan had spread
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    from Tennessee to every Southern state.
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    They embarked on a campaign of terror,
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    a war of clandestine attacks.
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    The purpose, to intimidate
    newly freed blacks
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    and keep them from the voting booths.
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    The Reconstruction Klansman saw himself
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    as the only vehicle to restore
    the Southern way of life
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    and social order that had been
    disrupted by the Civil War.
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    How do we put the
    outsiders in their place,
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    these uppity blacks?
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    Through terror.
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    [melancholy discordant music]
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    [Narrator]
    The first tactic was usually a warning,
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    a threatening message left
    on the door of a target.
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    [horse neighs]
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    When intimidation failed, the
    Klan resorted to violent acts.
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    The most common abuse was flogging.
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    Under the cover of
    night, victims were tied
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    and whipped with tree branches.
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    Some blacks incurred hundreds of lashings.
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    Many died as a result.
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    The spectacle of these hooded nightriders
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    with these horrific-looking costumes
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    was enough to terrorize people,
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    and then they took people
    out, they tied 'em to trees,
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    they beat them, they flogged them,
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    they lynched them, they burned them out.
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    Almost anything they were capable
    of doing, and they did it.
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    [Narrator]
    Amidst the carnage,
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    Klan victims had little recourse.
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    The majority of public
    opinion was in sympathy
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    with the objectives of the Klan,
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    if not always the methods they used.
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    The Klan was able to terrorize
    with virtual immunity.
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    [tense ethereal music]
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    From the onset of violence,
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    General Forrest claimed
    to be against the terror.
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    In January of 1869, he
    ordered the Klan disbanded,
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    its records destroyed, its robes burned.
  • 16:34 - 16:35
    -[flames crackle]
    -[tense brooding music]
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    Some local Klans adhered
    to the order. Many did not.
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    Several Southern governors
    enlisted their state militias
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    to battle the Klan.
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    The efforts produced mixed results.
  • 16:51 - 16:53
    In the early 1870s,
  • 16:53 - 16:57
    Congress passed the Enforcement
    Act and the Ku Klux Act.
  • 16:57 - 17:00
    These laws made it a felony
    for two or more persons
  • 17:00 - 17:03
    to conspire or go in
    disguise with the intent
  • 17:03 - 17:08
    to deprive an individual of
    any civil right or privilege.
  • 17:08 - 17:11
    When President Hayes
    officially ended Reconstruction
  • 17:11 - 17:16
    in 1876, the last vestiges
    of the Klan disappeared,
  • 17:16 - 17:20
    a victim of federal
    investigations, prosecutions,
  • 17:20 - 17:23
    and in some ways, its own success.
  • 17:24 - 17:26
    The end of Reconstruction
    signaled the beginning
  • 17:26 - 17:30
    of a new racial caste system in the South,
  • 17:30 - 17:33
    separate and unequal,
  • 17:33 - 17:37
    a system that would remain
    in place for 100 years.
  • 17:39 - 17:41
    The numbers of blacks murdered in this era
  • 17:41 - 17:43
    will never be accurately known,
  • 17:43 - 17:46
    but the carnage inflicted
    by the Klan was staggering.
  • 17:46 - 17:50
    Certainly, hundreds were
    killed, thousands injured.
  • 17:50 - 17:55
    -[bugs chittering]
    -["Amazing Grace"]
  • 17:56 - 17:58
    As the 20th century dawned,
  • 17:58 - 18:00
    the Ku Klux Klan was a fading memory.
  • 18:00 - 18:03
    Recollections of the
    hooded order were tainted
  • 18:03 - 18:07
    by popular literature which
    portrayed the Invisible Empire
  • 18:07 - 18:10
    as an heroic force simply battling
  • 18:10 - 18:12
    to maintain the proper social order.
  • 18:12 - 18:14
    [upbeat 1900s music]
  • 18:14 - 18:16
    This fanciful remembrance
  • 18:16 - 18:19
    would help fuel the Klan's revival.
  • 18:20 - 18:24
    On Thanksgiving Eve 1915, 16 men gathered
  • 18:24 - 18:26
    atop Stone Mountain in Georgia.
  • 18:26 - 18:29
    As night fell, a towering
    cross was ignited,
  • 18:29 - 18:33
    and the Ku Klux Klan was reborn.
  • 18:33 - 18:35
    The organizer of the
    spectacle was a preacher
  • 18:35 - 18:39
    turned salesman named
    William Joseph Simmons.
  • 18:39 - 18:40
    [tense brooding music]
  • 18:40 - 18:42
    Colonel William J. Simmons
  • 18:42 - 18:47
    was a failed Methodist clergyman
    who had had left the cloth
  • 18:47 - 18:51
    in order to become a fraternal organizer.
  • 18:51 - 18:53
    [Narrator] Simmons claimed the idea
  • 18:53 - 18:56
    of starting a new Klan
    came to him in a vision.
  • 18:56 - 19:00
    The birth of the group was
    simply a matter of timing.
  • 19:00 - 19:02
    The moment arrived with the release of one
  • 19:02 - 19:05
    of the greatest cinematic
    achievements of its time.
  • 19:05 - 19:09
    [soft dramatic 1900s music]
  • 19:12 - 19:15
    Just days following the
    Stone Mountain cross burning,
  • 19:15 - 19:18
    "The birth of a Nation"
    was released in the South.
  • 19:18 - 19:22
    DW Griffith's film played
    to sold out theaters.
  • 19:22 - 19:27
    The filmmaking was flawless.
    The history was not.
  • 19:30 - 19:32
    In "The Birth of the Nation,"
    the Klan is a heroic force.
  • 19:32 - 19:34
    It is the defender of white womanhood
  • 19:34 - 19:38
    against the ravages of
    the newly freed slaves,
  • 19:38 - 19:40
    these animals, these
    beasts whose main purpose
  • 19:40 - 19:42
    in life is to ravage white women.
  • 19:42 - 19:44
    It's a heroic force. It's a noble force.
  • 19:45 - 19:48
    [Narrator]
    In the film's climactic scene,
  • 19:48 - 19:50
    a group of hooded Klansmen
    ride to the rescue
  • 19:50 - 19:53
    of the film's imperiled heroin as she
  • 19:53 - 19:57
    is threatened by lust-crazed black men.
  • 19:57 - 19:59
    Black Americans reacted
    to "Birth of the Nation"
  • 19:59 - 20:03
    with horror, with protest,
    with demonstrations.
  • 20:03 - 20:06
    It was an assault on black America.
  • 20:06 - 20:08
    At a time when there were no depictions
  • 20:08 - 20:10
    of black people as human beings,
  • 20:10 - 20:13
    this depicted us as beasts
    and depicted these criminals
  • 20:13 - 20:15
    as heroes and saviors.
  • 20:16 - 20:19
    [Narrator]
    Despite its historical inaccuracies,
  • 20:19 - 20:22
    the film gained legitimacy
    after President Woodrow Wilson
  • 20:22 - 20:24
    screened the epic in the White House.
  • 20:24 - 20:27
    "It is like writing
    history with lightning,"
  • 20:27 - 20:29
    the president said.
  • 20:29 - 20:33
    "My only regret is that
    it is also terribly true."
  • 20:34 - 20:36
    The effect of the film was enormous.
  • 20:37 - 20:41
    It increased hatred toward blacks.
  • 20:41 - 20:43
    It made people believe in the history
  • 20:43 - 20:45
    that was portrayed in it.
  • 20:46 - 20:48
    Even Unitarian ministers endorsed it,
  • 20:48 - 20:50
    and it just had a great effect
  • 20:50 - 20:55
    on changing people's
    attitudes toward blacks
  • 20:55 - 20:59
    and convincing them that
    these people really do need
  • 20:59 - 21:00
    to be controlled.
  • 21:00 - 21:04
    [tense brooding music]
  • 21:04 - 21:06
    [Narrator] At his Atlanta home,
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    Simmons mapped out the vehicle of control
  • 21:08 - 21:11
    in a manual called the "Kloran."
  • 21:11 - 21:14
    The handbook described
    the Klan secret rites,
  • 21:14 - 21:16
    rituals, and oaths.
  • 21:18 - 21:21
    It defined the meanings
    of strange names created
  • 21:21 - 21:25
    for Klan ceremonies,
    regions, and officers.
  • 21:25 - 21:29
    Simmons bestowed upon himself
    the title of Imperial Wizard,
  • 21:29 - 21:32
    emperor of the Invisible Empire.
  • 21:33 - 21:36
    As Simmons set forth to build his kingdom,
  • 21:36 - 21:39
    he found recruits hard to come by.
  • 21:40 - 21:43
    But Klan publicists
    devised a sales pitch based
  • 21:43 - 21:47
    on the slogan "100% Americanism."
  • 21:47 - 21:50
    The new Klan would be a
    patriotic organization
  • 21:50 - 21:53
    for American-born white Protestants only.
  • 21:53 - 21:57
    It was no longer enough for
    the Klan to be anti-black.
  • 21:57 - 22:00
    It now added Jews, Catholics,
  • 22:00 - 22:03
    and immigrants to its list of enemies.
  • 22:03 - 22:05
    -[flames crackle]
    -[tense brooding music]
  • 22:05 - 22:09
    The recruitment strategy
    was a spectacular success.
  • 22:09 - 22:12
    Within 15 months, the Klan enrolled more
  • 22:12 - 22:14
    than 100,000 new members.
  • 22:14 - 22:18
    The Klan had tapped a fear
    in millions of Americans.
  • 22:20 - 22:24
    In the 20s, a strong portion
    of America felt invaded.
  • 22:25 - 22:28
    They felt invaded by immigrants,
  • 22:28 - 22:30
    Catholics were growing in number,
  • 22:30 - 22:32
    and they felt that America
  • 22:32 - 22:35
    was no longer the America they knew.
  • 22:35 - 22:37
    And so there was a strong
    feeling that they wanted
  • 22:37 - 22:39
    to restore the America they knew,
  • 22:39 - 22:41
    and the Klan promised them that, too.
  • 22:43 - 22:46
    [Narrator]
    But as the Klan grew, so did its problems.
  • 22:46 - 22:51
    Rumors spread about Klan
    leadership misappropriating funds.
  • 22:51 - 22:55
    Rank and file Klansmen took
    to heart the fiery rhetoric
  • 22:55 - 22:58
    being used to increase membership,
  • 22:58 - 23:00
    and acts of violence began to occur.
  • 23:00 - 23:03
    -[saddles clinking]
    -[hooves clopping]
  • 23:03 - 23:07
    The Klan was rocked by bad press in 1921.
  • 23:07 - 23:10
    Based on information supplied
    by a former Klan recruiter,
  • 23:10 - 23:15
    "The New York World" newspaper
    ran a scathing Klan exposé.
  • 23:15 - 23:18
    The paper detailed Klan atrocities
  • 23:18 - 23:20
    and financial irregularities.
  • 23:20 - 23:22
    [tense brooding music]
  • 23:22 - 23:26
    In response, Congress held
    hearings into Klan activities.
  • 23:26 - 23:29
    The star witness, Imperial Wizard Simmons,
  • 23:29 - 23:33
    denied all accusations
    and dazzled the senators.
  • 23:35 - 23:38
    The committee adjourned
    without taking any action.
  • 23:38 - 23:41
    Amazingly, the investigations
    had the opposite effect
  • 23:41 - 23:43
    from which they were intended.
  • 23:45 - 23:47
    Simmons claimed the
    publicity was instrumental
  • 23:47 - 23:49
    in the growth of the Klan.
  • 23:51 - 23:53
    [Man]
    "It wasn't until the newspapers began
  • 23:53 - 23:56
    to attack the Klan that it really grew.
  • 23:56 - 23:59
    Certain newspapers aided
    us by inducing Congress
  • 23:59 - 24:00
    to investigate us.
  • 24:00 - 24:02
    The result was that Congress
  • 24:02 - 24:04
    gave us the best advertising we ever got.
  • 24:04 - 24:05
    Congress made us."
  • 24:08 - 24:09
    [Announcer]
    The History Channel returns
  • 24:09 - 24:11
    to Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History."
  • 24:11 - 24:16
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle and roar]
  • 24:20 - 24:24
    -[flames crackle and roar]
    -[tense music]
  • 24:24 - 24:25
    [Narrator]
    Riding a wave of publicity
  • 24:25 - 24:29
    from the newspaper exposés
    and congressional hearings,
  • 24:29 - 24:31
    the Klan burst out of the South
  • 24:31 - 24:34
    in an incredible surge of growth.
  • 24:35 - 24:38
    Klaverns arose in every
    state of the Union.
  • 24:40 - 24:43
    New members willingly
    paid a $10 initiation fee
  • 24:43 - 24:46
    for the privilege of
    donning the robe and hood.
  • 24:49 - 24:51
    Klan recruiters use the Protestant church
  • 24:51 - 24:53
    to their full advantage.
  • 24:53 - 24:56
    They persuaded local
    ministers to join the Klan
  • 24:56 - 25:00
    by offering free membership
    and a position of leadership.
  • 25:00 - 25:03
    -["Amazing Grace"]
    -[tense dramatic music]
  • 25:03 - 25:06
    Klansmen would then make a mysterious call
  • 25:06 - 25:07
    on the congregation.
  • 25:07 - 25:10
    With prior engagement by the minister,
  • 25:10 - 25:14
    they would appear during the
    service on Sunday morning,
  • 25:14 - 25:17
    make a donation to the church,
  • 25:17 - 25:20
    which the minister
    would receive and bless,
  • 25:20 - 25:21
    and then they would withdraw,
  • 25:21 - 25:25
    and the people would know
    that the Klan was now in town.
  • 25:27 - 25:29
    [Narrator]
    When the Klan wrapped its message
  • 25:29 - 25:32
    in the sacred symbols of Christianity
  • 25:32 - 25:35
    and the hallowed cloth
    of the American flag,
  • 25:35 - 25:39
    it found new members
    easily induced to join.
  • 25:39 - 25:43
    In order to recruit, the
    Klan has to have a message
  • 25:43 - 25:48
    that's palatable, and
    if the Klan message was,
  • 25:48 - 25:51
    "Join the Klan and we'll lynch a black
  • 25:51 - 25:52
    or we'll burn a building,"
  • 25:52 - 25:54
    very few people would join the Klan.
  • 25:54 - 25:59
    And so the Klan cloaks
    it's it's its goals in good
  • 25:59 - 26:01
    and Christian and right and moral
  • 26:01 - 26:03
    and just and patriotic purposes.
  • 26:03 - 26:05
    [tense brooding music]
  • 26:05 - 26:09
    [Narrator]
    By 1922, three million white Americans
  • 26:09 - 26:11
    had joined the hooded order.
  • 26:11 - 26:13
    The stereotype of Klan members
  • 26:13 - 26:17
    as unschooled and savage is inaccurate.
  • 26:17 - 26:21
    Klan membership in the 1920s
    represented a cross section
  • 26:21 - 26:24
    of the white Protestant community.
  • 26:25 - 26:26
    -[school bell rings]
    -[muffled chatter]
  • 26:26 - 26:29
    At the same time American women
    were demanding equal rights,
  • 26:29 - 26:33
    women who supported Klan
    ideals demanded entrance
  • 26:33 - 26:36
    into the Invisible Empire.
  • 26:36 - 26:38
    Their overtures resulted in the formation
  • 26:38 - 26:40
    of the Women of the Ku Klux Klan
  • 26:40 - 26:43
    and other women Klan organizations.
  • 26:43 - 26:47
    -[soft tense music]
    -[muffled chatter]
  • 26:47 - 26:51
    At its height, 500,000 women were members
  • 26:51 - 26:53
    of the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 26:56 - 26:58
    With millions now counting themselves
  • 26:58 - 27:00
    as members of the hooded order,
  • 27:00 - 27:04
    the Ku Klux Klan became the
    great social organization
  • 27:04 - 27:08
    for much of white Protestant
    America in the 1920s.
  • 27:10 - 27:12
    The Klan demonstrated its popularity
  • 27:12 - 27:16
    with its own form of
    pageantry, main street parades.
  • 27:16 - 27:21
    The marches were exhibitions
    of might and spectacle.
  • 27:21 - 27:26
    As Klan membership roles grew,
    so did its political power.
  • 27:26 - 27:28
    In the national arena, the Klan helped
  • 27:28 - 27:31
    to elect 16 United States senators,
  • 27:31 - 27:34
    five of whom were sworn Klan members.
  • 27:34 - 27:38
    One of the five, Hugo Black,
    recanted his allegiance
  • 27:38 - 27:41
    when he later became a
    Supreme Court justice.
  • 27:42 - 27:44
    From California to New Jersey,
  • 27:44 - 27:46
    voters elected Klan-backed candidates
  • 27:46 - 27:50
    to a variety of statewide
    and local offices.
  • 27:50 - 27:51
    [tense music]
  • 27:51 - 27:53
    You couldn't run for public
    office in some places
  • 27:53 - 27:56
    unless you had the Klan
    endorsement and Klan support
  • 27:56 - 27:58
    because it had this enormous membership,
  • 27:58 - 28:00
    and it enjoyed the sympathy of non-members
  • 28:00 - 28:03
    who may not have always
    condoned the most horrific
  • 28:03 - 28:06
    and brutal acts but who
    thought the Klan served a role
  • 28:06 - 28:10
    in helping tamp down these
    dissident elements in society.
  • 28:10 - 28:14
    [crowd yelling and cheering]
  • 28:14 - 28:19
    -[dark brooding music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 28:20 - 28:22
    -[flames crackle]
    -[tense music]
  • 28:22 - 28:25
    [Narrator]
    Klan philosophy was one of exclusion.
  • 28:25 - 28:30
    The groups on the out,
    blacks, Catholics and Jews,
  • 28:30 - 28:32
    were subject to intimidation,
  • 28:32 - 28:35
    economic boycott, and violence.
  • 28:35 - 28:38
    [flames crackle]
  • 28:38 - 28:42
    While the majority of members
    abstained from vigilantism,
  • 28:42 - 28:44
    the Klan was responsible for episodes
  • 28:44 - 28:46
    of racial and religious terror.
  • 28:46 - 28:49
    Most crimes transpired in the South,
  • 28:49 - 28:53
    but Klan intimidation was felt nationwide.
  • 28:54 - 28:57
    Most of violence was directed at blacks.
  • 28:57 - 29:01
    They were subject to beatings, floggings,
  • 29:02 - 29:04
    and, at times, murder.
  • 29:05 - 29:07
    [flames crackle]
  • 29:07 - 29:10
    But the Klan mission of
    the 1920s was broader
  • 29:10 - 29:13
    than the intimidation
    of African Americans.
  • 29:13 - 29:17
    Portland, Oregon's exalted
    Cyclops once observed,
  • 29:17 - 29:21
    "The only way to cure a
    Catholic is to kill him."
  • 29:21 - 29:24
    While few Klansman advocated
    the murder of Catholics,
  • 29:24 - 29:29
    the anti-Catholic sentiment
    was a lure for new members.
  • 29:29 - 29:31
    Because of their abundant numbers,
  • 29:31 - 29:35
    Catholics bore the brunt of
    Klan religious terrorism.
  • 29:35 - 29:37
    [soft tense music]
  • 29:37 - 29:38
    But those of the Jewish faith
  • 29:38 - 29:41
    were equally despised by the Klan.
  • 29:42 - 29:46
    The Klan was able to operate
    outside the law because,
  • 29:46 - 29:49
    in many communities, its
    members were the law.
  • 29:49 - 29:53
    [tense brooding music]
  • 29:53 - 29:57
    In the last half of 1922,
    Morehouse Parish, Louisiana
  • 29:57 - 29:59
    was run by the Klan.
  • 29:59 - 30:02
    Because the hooded order had
    infiltrated law enforcement,
  • 30:02 - 30:04
    Klansmen were confident they
  • 30:04 - 30:07
    could get away with anything, even murder.
  • 30:11 - 30:13
    In the midst of rapid Klan vigilantism,
  • 30:13 - 30:17
    two outspoken critics of
    the Klan were murdered,
  • 30:17 - 30:18
    -[men grunting]
    -[punches land]
  • 30:18 - 30:20
    their bodies thrown into a river.
  • 30:21 - 30:24
    Realizing the Klan controlled the town,
  • 30:24 - 30:26
    a desperate governor, John M. Parker,
  • 30:26 - 30:30
    appealed to the US Justice
    Department for help.
  • 30:30 - 30:32
    [Man]
    "Due to activities of the Klan,
  • 30:32 - 30:36
    men have been taken out,
    beaten, and whipped.
  • 30:36 - 30:38
    Two men had been brutally murdered.
  • 30:38 - 30:41
    These conditions are beyond the control
  • 30:41 - 30:43
    of the governor of this state.
  • 30:43 - 30:46
    A number of law officers
    are publicly recognized
  • 30:46 - 30:49
    as members of the Ku Klux Klan."
  • 30:52 - 30:54
    [Narrator]
    After Justice Department agents
  • 30:54 - 30:57
    discovered the victims' mutilated bodies,
  • 30:57 - 31:00
    the Klan was rescued by the legal system.
  • 31:00 - 31:03
    Two all-white grand juries,
  • 31:03 - 31:05
    each containing known Klan members,
  • 31:05 - 31:09
    heard overwhelming evidence
    that identified the guilty.
  • 31:09 - 31:11
    Neither jury brought indictments.
  • 31:13 - 31:16
    [flames crackle]
  • 31:16 - 31:20
    In the midst of Klan terror,
    voices of dissent were raised.
  • 31:21 - 31:25
    Some states began to fight back
    with anti-Klan legislation.
  • 31:25 - 31:30
    The most popular law forbade
    the wearing of masks in public,
  • 31:30 - 31:34
    but these efforts did little
    to curtail Klan activity.
  • 31:37 - 31:39
    As the Klan weathered external assaults,
  • 31:39 - 31:42
    an internal coup toppled
    Imperial Wizard Simmons.
  • 31:45 - 31:50
    The leader of the revolt, a
    Texas dentist named Hiram Evans
  • 31:50 - 31:54
    seized command of the Invisible Empire.
  • 31:58 - 32:01
    Although power struggles and
    scandals sullied its image,
  • 32:01 - 32:02
    in many parts of the country,
  • 32:02 - 32:06
    the Klan was just reaching
    its pinnacle of prestige.
  • 32:06 - 32:09
    The greatest success story
    of the American Klandom
  • 32:09 - 32:11
    was taking shape in Indiana.
  • 32:12 - 32:14
    In the end, it would also be one
  • 32:14 - 32:18
    of the Klan's most
    despicable stories of horror.
  • 32:20 - 32:25
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 32:28 - 32:30
    -[crickets chirping]
    -[horses neigh]
  • 32:30 - 32:33
    The Klan dream of complete
    political power came
  • 32:33 - 32:37
    to fruition not in the
    South but in Indiana.
  • 32:37 - 32:41
    The hooded order's rise
    and in the Hoosier state
  • 32:41 - 32:45
    was orchestrated by
    David Curtis Stephenson.
  • 32:45 - 32:49
    David Curtis Stephenson was
    a very talented charlatan
  • 32:49 - 32:52
    and an acute businessman.
  • 32:52 - 32:55
    And when the Klan started
    in a very, very small way
  • 32:55 - 32:58
    in the Southern part of the state,
  • 32:58 - 33:00
    he realized the potential for it.
  • 33:00 - 33:03
    [Narrator]
    Stephenson championed the purity of womanhood,
  • 33:03 - 33:06
    strongly supported Prohibition,
  • 33:06 - 33:10
    and sold the Klan as a Christian
    political organization.
  • 33:10 - 33:15
    As a result, over 350,000
    Indiana residents joined.
  • 33:17 - 33:20
    This large Klan voting
    block allowed Stephenson
  • 33:20 - 33:23
    to take over Indiana's
    political apparatus.
  • 33:25 - 33:27
    In the 1924 Indiana election,
  • 33:27 - 33:30
    almost every Republican candidate
  • 33:30 - 33:32
    was hand picked by Stephenson.
  • 33:32 - 33:36
    Stephenson had an interesting technique.
  • 33:36 - 33:40
    He made candidates sign
    little pledges that,
  • 33:40 - 33:45
    in order for the client's
    support, they would support him.
  • 33:45 - 33:49
    So basically, he had these
    elected officials in his pocket.
  • 33:49 - 33:50
    It was on signed paper.
  • 33:52 - 33:54
    [Narrator]
    Stephenson-backed candidates swept
  • 33:54 - 33:56
    to victory in the November elections.
  • 33:56 - 33:58
    The Klan elected the governor,
  • 33:58 - 34:02
    controlled both houses of the legislature,
  • 34:02 - 34:04
    and Klan candidates won a variety
  • 34:04 - 34:06
    of local political offices.
  • 34:08 - 34:11
    Stephenson was at the
    height of political power,
  • 34:11 - 34:15
    but in less than a year,
    he would be confined
  • 34:15 - 34:19
    to a state penitentiary,
    serving a life sentence.
  • 34:19 - 34:21
    [cell bars rattling]
  • 34:21 - 34:26
    On a March night in 1925,
    Stephenson ordered his aides
  • 34:26 - 34:29
    to bring 28-year-old Madge Oberholtzer
  • 34:29 - 34:31
    to his Indianapolis home.
  • 34:31 - 34:33
    Oberholtzer was one of many women
  • 34:33 - 34:36
    in whom Stephenson had a sexual interest.
  • 34:36 - 34:39
    After forcing her to drink with him,
  • 34:39 - 34:44
    Stephenson whisked Oberholtzer
    away to a private train car.
  • 34:44 - 34:49
    He took her on the train where
    Stephenson got more drunk,
  • 34:49 - 34:50
    and he raped her.
  • 34:50 - 34:52
    He not only raped her.
  • 34:52 - 34:55
    He chewed her like a
    cannibal, put her near death.
  • 34:56 - 35:01
    They stopped off before Chicago
    in a town called Hammond,
  • 35:01 - 35:05
    and she was bleeding, she was crying,
  • 35:05 - 35:07
    and she was scared to death.
  • 35:08 - 35:11
    [Narrator]
    Distraught, Oberholtzer ingested tablets
  • 35:11 - 35:15
    of the toxic chemical mercury chloride.
  • 35:15 - 35:17
    -[Madge sobbing]
    -[slow somber music]
  • 35:17 - 35:20
    On the drive home, a
    spiteful Stephenson refused
  • 35:20 - 35:24
    to obtain medical attention
    for the critically ill woman.
  • 35:24 - 35:27
    "I'll have the law on
    you!" Oberholtzer cried,
  • 35:27 - 35:31
    to which Stephenson replied,
    "I am the law in Indiana."
  • 35:31 - 35:34
    [tense brooding music]
  • 35:34 - 35:36
    Stephenson held Oberholtzer captive
  • 35:36 - 35:39
    in his garage apartment overnight.
  • 35:40 - 35:44
    The following day, aides
    drove the woman home,
  • 35:44 - 35:48
    but the lack of medical
    treatment was costly.
  • 35:48 - 35:50
    When her doctor came
    over, he found that she
  • 35:50 - 35:52
    had been chewed to pieces,
  • 35:52 - 35:54
    that she was suffering kidney failure,
  • 35:54 - 35:57
    and that she wouldn't be
    able to live much longer.
  • 35:59 - 36:00
    [Narrator]
    In her last days,
  • 36:00 - 36:03
    Madge Oberholtzer single-handedly
  • 36:03 - 36:07
    destroyed the most powerful
    man in the state of Indiana.
  • 36:07 - 36:11
    In a deathbed statement, she
    testified she had been beaten
  • 36:11 - 36:14
    and raped by DC Stephenson.
  • 36:17 - 36:20
    Oberholtzer's signature
    sealed the Klan leader's fate.
  • 36:22 - 36:26
    17 days later, the
    critically ill woman died.
  • 36:26 - 36:29
    [slow somber music]
  • 36:33 - 36:35
    Stephenson was arrested and charged
  • 36:35 - 36:37
    with second-degree murder.
  • 36:37 - 36:39
    [dark brooding music]
  • 36:39 - 36:41
    He remained smug.
  • 36:41 - 36:43
    Surely no jury would convict the leader
  • 36:43 - 36:45
    of the great Klan state of Indiana.
  • 36:48 - 36:51
    But on November 11, 1925,
  • 36:51 - 36:54
    an Indiana jury found Stephenson guilty
  • 36:54 - 36:57
    and sentenced him to life in prison.
  • 36:57 - 36:59
    [gavel bangs]
  • 36:59 - 37:00
    Stephenson was confident the governor
  • 37:00 - 37:03
    would grant him a pardon,
    but the Klan leader
  • 37:03 - 37:06
    was shunned by those who owed him favors.
  • 37:07 - 37:09
    Stephenson had a card left to play,
  • 37:09 - 37:12
    two small black boxes.
  • 37:12 - 37:15
    Inside was evidence of
    the political misdeeds,
  • 37:15 - 37:19
    bribes, and illegal
    promises candidates made
  • 37:19 - 37:21
    to elicit Klan support.
  • 37:23 - 37:25
    When no one came to his aid,
  • 37:25 - 37:28
    Stephenson had associates
    release the contents
  • 37:28 - 37:30
    of the black box.
  • 37:30 - 37:32
    The fallout was dramatic.
  • 37:32 - 37:36
    Governor Ed Jackson was
    charged with bribery.
  • 37:36 - 37:40
    The mayor of Indianapolis
    was sent to prison.
  • 37:40 - 37:44
    Hundreds of Republicans
    had their careers ruined.
  • 37:44 - 37:45
    [dramatic music]
  • 37:45 - 37:49
    The Stephenson affair was a
    crushing blow to the Klan,
  • 37:49 - 37:52
    not only in Indiana but nationally.
  • 37:53 - 37:58
    The downfall of Stephenson
    showed the essential hypocrisy
  • 37:58 - 38:00
    and lies of the Klan.
  • 38:01 - 38:05
    They championed the purity
    of American womanhood,
  • 38:05 - 38:10
    they championed Christianity,
    the championed Prohibition,
  • 38:11 - 38:14
    and here is Stephenson
    violating all the three
  • 38:14 - 38:16
    in about the worst way possible.
  • 38:17 - 38:19
    [Narrator]
    In an effort to shine a more positive light
  • 38:19 - 38:23
    on the Ku Klux Klan, Imperial Wizard Evans
  • 38:23 - 38:26
    staged the grandest of all
    Klan public spectacles.
  • 38:26 - 38:29
    -[tense music]
    -[muffled chatter]
  • 38:29 - 38:32
    To symbolize the Klan's national power,
  • 38:33 - 38:36
    Evans chose the nation's Capitol
  • 38:36 - 38:40
    as the location for the
    largest-ever Klan parade.
  • 38:41 - 38:46
    On August 8th, 1925, Evans
    led 40,000 robed Klansmen
  • 38:47 - 38:50
    from around the country
    down Pennsylvania Avenue.
  • 38:54 - 38:57
    [tense brooding music]
  • 38:57 - 39:01
    It was, however, the last
    hurrah of Klandom in the 1920s.
  • 39:02 - 39:05
    The scandals, negative press,
  • 39:05 - 39:08
    and violence began to exact a toll.
  • 39:11 - 39:13
    Disturbed by the extent of the brutality,
  • 39:13 - 39:16
    mass defections of Klansmen began.
  • 39:16 - 39:20
    Membership, over four million in 1925,
  • 39:20 - 39:24
    plummeted to just several
    hundred thousand by 1948.
  • 39:24 - 39:27
    [flames crackle]
  • 39:27 - 39:30
    I don't think there can be any question
  • 39:30 - 39:34
    that the Klan destroyed itself.
  • 39:34 - 39:37
    The Klan came in as who reformer,
  • 39:37 - 39:41
    but the Klansmen did not live up to this,
  • 39:41 - 39:44
    and in every state, it tore self apart
  • 39:44 - 39:47
    through the immorality
    and timed the violence.
  • 39:47 - 39:50
    [Narrator]
    The demise of the 1920s-era Klan
  • 39:50 - 39:53
    did not signal the death
    of the hooded order.
  • 39:53 - 39:56
    A splintered empire lay under the surface,
  • 39:56 - 39:58
    waiting to rise again.
  • 40:01 - 40:06
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 40:07 - 40:12
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[muffled chatter]
  • 40:13 - 40:16
    As the country struggled
    through the Great Depression,
  • 40:16 - 40:19
    Klan membership dwindled to about 100,000.
  • 40:20 - 40:24
    The Klan's enemy list
    shifted in the 1930s.
  • 40:24 - 40:26
    Communists and unions replaced Catholics
  • 40:26 - 40:28
    at the top of the hate slate.
  • 40:29 - 40:33
    The center of Klan activity
    shifted back to the South.
  • 40:33 - 40:36
    -[bugs chittering]
    -[birds chirping]
  • 40:36 - 40:39
    The national Klan organization
    was dealt a fatal blow
  • 40:39 - 40:42
    in 1944 when the Internal Revenue Service
  • 40:42 - 40:47
    placed a $650,000 lien against
    the Klan for back taxes.
  • 40:49 - 40:52
    [dark brooding music]
  • 40:52 - 40:55
    It appeared as if the Klan
    might finally be dead.
  • 40:59 - 41:03
    But just two years later,
    nearly 1,000 Klansmen assembled
  • 41:03 - 41:07
    at Stone Mountain in Georgia,
    the home of Klan revivals.
  • 41:07 - 41:12
    The organizer was a 44-year-old
    Georgia obstetrician,
  • 41:12 - 41:13
    Dr. Sam Green.
  • 41:13 - 41:15
    [tense brooding music]
  • 41:15 - 41:19
    The spectacular 1946 ceremony
    signaled how Klan groups
  • 41:19 - 41:22
    would be organized in the future,
  • 41:22 - 41:26
    as self-governing units with
    no national affiliation.
  • 41:27 - 41:32
    Green, a 25-year Klan
    veteran, once boasted,
  • 41:32 - 41:34
    "The Klan has never been dead,
  • 41:34 - 41:37
    and the Klan is never going to die."
  • 41:37 - 41:39
    His words were prophetic.
  • 41:41 - 41:45
    In the 1950s and 60s, the
    South became a battleground
  • 41:45 - 41:49
    over the issues of
    integration and civil rights.
  • 41:49 - 41:52
    A new breed of Klansmen
    signed up as soldiers
  • 41:52 - 41:54
    in the fight against black equality.
  • 41:54 - 41:59
    -[flames crackle]
    -[dramatic music]
  • 42:00 - 42:05
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 42:08 - 42:12
    [tense ethereal music]
  • 42:12 - 42:16
    In the 1950s, segregation
    was the accepted way
  • 42:16 - 42:21
    of Southern life, yet separate
    but equal was only half true.
  • 42:24 - 42:28
    Blacks enjoyed little quality
    in a time of racial unrest.
  • 42:28 - 42:31
    If you lived in this house
    in the middle of 1950s
  • 42:31 - 42:33
    and you were black, if you
    want it to eat something
  • 42:33 - 42:35
    at a downtown cafeteria,
    you had to stand at the end
  • 42:35 - 42:38
    of the counter, take it out
    in the street, and eat it.
  • 42:38 - 42:39
    You wanted to go to the
    bathroom in downtown
  • 42:39 - 42:42
    of most big cities in the
    South and most small towns,
  • 42:42 - 42:43
    you had to wait until you got home.
  • 42:43 - 42:46
    When you got on a bus, you
    had to sit in the back.
  • 42:46 - 42:47
    [crowd yelling]
  • 42:47 - 42:50
    You lived in a world surrounded by fear,
  • 42:50 - 42:52
    surrounded by not knowing who you were,
  • 42:52 - 42:54
    what you could do, where you could go.
  • 42:54 - 42:57
    It was a horrific, horrific way of life.
  • 43:00 - 43:03
    [Narrator]
    In 1954, the United States Supreme Court
  • 43:03 - 43:05
    struck down school segregation
  • 43:05 - 43:09
    in the historic Brown Versus
    Board of Education ruling.
  • 43:11 - 43:14
    The decision was met with a firestorm
  • 43:14 - 43:16
    of protest from the South.
  • 43:16 - 43:18
    [crowd yelling]
  • 43:18 - 43:21
    The Klan rose again as the walls
  • 43:21 - 43:23
    of segregation began to crumble.
  • 43:23 - 43:25
    Out here in the wild wood,
    the beasts don't integrate.
  • 43:25 - 43:28
    I have printed in pictures that
    the rivers don't integrate.
  • 43:28 - 43:30
    The problem with that,
  • 43:30 - 43:33
    they still say segregated.
  • 43:33 - 43:33
    They got more sense than a bunch
  • 43:33 - 43:35
    of Supreme Court judges up there.
  • 43:37 - 43:41
    Brown Versus Board lit the
    feeders under the bottom Klan,
  • 43:41 - 43:43
    and people in the South said, "Look,
  • 43:44 - 43:47
    the federal court has
    said little black boys
  • 43:47 - 43:50
    can be in classrooms
    with little white girls,
  • 43:50 - 43:53
    and that's not gonna happen.
  • 43:53 - 43:56
    And not only that, they're
    gonna integrate swimming pools
  • 43:56 - 43:59
    and public facilities,
    and next thing you know,
  • 43:59 - 44:01
    they'll be integrating hotels and motels
  • 44:01 - 44:04
    and restaurants and even
    drinking fountains."
  • 44:04 - 44:08
    So this gave the Klan a license to grow.
  • 44:08 - 44:09
    -[tense bluesy rock music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 44:09 - 44:11
    [Narrator] Because the
    national organization
  • 44:11 - 44:15
    was destroyed by the IRS in 1944,
  • 44:15 - 44:18
    no longer was there any
    such thing as the Klan.
  • 44:18 - 44:22
    Independent Klans formed
    all around the South,
  • 44:22 - 44:25
    each separate, each autonomous.
  • 44:25 - 44:27
    -[flames crackle]
    -[muffled shouting]
  • 44:27 - 44:30
    The South was a site of constant battles
  • 44:30 - 44:32
    over the question of integration.
  • 44:32 - 44:36
    In their are attempts to
    defend the racial caste system,
  • 44:36 - 44:38
    many Klan groups became more militant.
  • 44:38 - 44:41
    -[muffled shouting]
    -[tense music]
  • 44:41 - 44:44
    Burning a cross, long a sacred ceremony,
  • 44:44 - 44:46
    was increasingly used
  • 44:46 - 44:49
    as the Klan's preferred tactic of terror.
  • 44:49 - 44:52
    The Klan used other time-honored
    tactics of intimidation:
  • 44:54 - 44:55
    economic boycott,
  • 44:57 - 44:58
    beatings,
  • 45:00 - 45:01
    and murder.
  • 45:03 - 45:06
    [tense brooding music]
  • 45:06 - 45:08
    Racial violence in the aftermath
  • 45:08 - 45:11
    of the Supreme Court
    ruling was staggering.
  • 45:11 - 45:14
    While not responsible for every act,
  • 45:14 - 45:19
    much of the terror had the
    letters KKK written all over it.
  • 45:20 - 45:24
    ♪ Oh oh oh deep in my heart ♪
  • 45:25 - 45:29
    In the early 1960s,
    blacks protested centuries
  • 45:29 - 45:33
    of second-class citizenship
    in lunch counter sit ins,
  • 45:34 - 45:40
    bus protests, and street demonstrations.
  • 45:40 - 45:43
    Their displeasure became more vocal,
  • 45:43 - 45:46
    more united, more demanding.
  • 45:46 - 45:49
    The stage was set for a Klan war
  • 45:49 - 45:51
    against the civil rights movement.
  • 45:51 - 45:55
    In 1960, the longest
    lasting of all Klan groups
  • 45:55 - 45:58
    was born when an Alabama salesman
  • 45:58 - 46:00
    named Robert Shelton created the UKA,
  • 46:00 - 46:03
    the United Klans of America.
  • 46:03 - 46:05
    He was a very clever organizer
  • 46:05 - 46:07
    and pulled together the Klan.
  • 46:07 - 46:08
    He was a salesman.
  • 46:08 - 46:11
    He ran a very businesslike Klan,
  • 46:11 - 46:14
    and he is also, I believe,
    extremely dangerous.
  • 46:14 - 46:15
    He's closed mouth.
  • 46:15 - 46:18
    He doesn't give press interviews,
  • 46:18 - 46:20
    loyal to the Klan to even the point
  • 46:20 - 46:23
    of taking a prison sentence
    for refusing to testify
  • 46:23 - 46:26
    before Congress and give
    up Klan's membership list.
  • 46:26 - 46:28
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 46:28 - 46:31
    [Narrator]
    The UKA's menacing reputation was cultivated
  • 46:31 - 46:35
    when it played a major
    role in the savage beating
  • 46:35 - 46:37
    of the Freedom Riders.
  • 46:37 - 46:42
    Early in 1961, CORE, the
    Congress of Racial Equality,
  • 46:42 - 46:45
    tested the 1960 Supreme Court mandate
  • 46:45 - 46:49
    of integrated bus stations
    by sending a group
  • 46:49 - 46:52
    of white and black riders
    on a bus pilgrimage
  • 46:52 - 46:54
    through the South.
  • 46:54 - 46:57
    -[tense music]
    -[bus humming]
  • 46:57 - 46:59
    At every station, riders would disembark
  • 46:59 - 47:02
    and attempt to use the
    segregated waiting rooms,
  • 47:02 - 47:04
    restaurants, and restrooms.
  • 47:06 - 47:09
    When the Freedom Riders arrived
    at the Trailways Station
  • 47:09 - 47:12
    in Birmingham, they
    were met by a white mob
  • 47:12 - 47:16
    that included 25 members of
    the United Klans of America.
  • 47:16 - 47:18
    And of course, the Klan
    beat these people senseless,
  • 47:18 - 47:22
    iron pipes, change, Coca-Cola crates,
  • 47:22 - 47:23
    knocked them unconscious,
  • 47:23 - 47:25
    left and bloodied and
    beaten in the street,
  • 47:25 - 47:26
    even beat innocent people.
  • 47:26 - 47:29
    A white man comes out of the
    bathroom at the bus station.
  • 47:29 - 47:30
    Bam, he's beaten.
  • 47:30 - 47:31
    Black guy comes to the bus station
  • 47:31 - 47:33
    to pick up his girlfriend,
    not a Freedom Rider.
  • 47:33 - 47:34
    Bam, he's beaten.
  • 47:35 - 47:37
    [Narrator]
    It was later learned Birmingham police
  • 47:37 - 47:39
    had prior knowledge of the attack,
  • 47:39 - 47:43
    but officers had made a deal
    with the Klan not to intervene.
  • 47:45 - 47:46
    With the complicity of the police,
  • 47:46 - 47:49
    they were allowed a
    timeframe that no policemen
  • 47:49 - 47:51
    would come in and try to stop them.
  • 47:51 - 47:54
    The bus arrives, and for about 15 minutes,
  • 47:54 - 47:58
    members of the UKA as
    well as others swung pipes
  • 47:58 - 48:01
    and sticks and kicked and
    beat up Freedom Riders.
  • 48:02 - 48:05
    [Narrator]
    Pressed as to why police were not present,
  • 48:05 - 48:08
    Police Commissioner Bull Connor explained,
  • 48:08 - 48:10
    "It was Mother's Day.
  • 48:10 - 48:12
    A lot of officers were
    home with their mothers."
  • 48:17 - 48:19
    [muffled shouting]
  • 48:19 - 48:22
    As the civil rights
    movement gain momentum,
  • 48:22 - 48:23
    its revered leader
  • 48:23 - 48:27
    became the Klansmen's most despised enemy.
  • 48:27 - 48:28
    ♪ Free ♪
  • 48:28 - 48:29
    And of those words comes a black man
  • 48:31 - 48:34
    [muffled speaking], and they
    call him Martin Luther King.
  • 48:34 - 48:38
    -We call him Martin Coon.
    -Coon! Coon! Coon!
  • 48:41 - 48:45
    And if this nigger think
    he can stir the niggers up,
  • 48:45 - 48:48
    I'll also inform him that the white man
  • 48:48 - 48:52
    can be stirred to defend
    what is rightfully theirs.
  • 48:52 - 48:55
    [crowd cheers and claps]
  • 48:57 - 48:58
    They despised Martin Luther King,
  • 48:58 - 49:00
    they hated Martin Luther King,
  • 49:00 - 49:04
    and he embodied for them
    this civil rights movement
  • 49:04 - 49:07
    which was succeeding
    despite their best efforts,
  • 49:07 - 49:11
    which was making their
    worst nightmare come true.
  • 49:11 - 49:14
    And to them, Martin Luther
    King sat on top of all this,
  • 49:14 - 49:16
    directing it, pulling the strings.
  • 49:16 - 49:18
    So he became their
    public enemy number one.
  • 49:19 - 49:20
    [Narrator]
    When Martin Luther King
  • 49:20 - 49:23
    and other civil rights
    leaders set their sights
  • 49:23 - 49:27
    on Birmingham, Alabama,
    the Klan was waiting.
  • 49:27 - 49:32
    -[tense ethereal blues music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 49:32 - 49:37
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 49:40 - 49:41
    [tense slow blues rock music]
  • 49:41 - 49:43
    By far, the bloodiest battleground
  • 49:43 - 49:47
    of the civil rights era was Birmingham.
  • 49:47 - 49:48
    In the early 1960s,
  • 49:48 - 49:53
    the town was a racial powder
    keg waiting to explode.
  • 49:54 - 49:58
    Birmingham was then the most
    segregated city in America,
  • 49:58 - 49:59
    and it had the longest history
  • 49:59 - 50:01
    of aggressive racial violence.
  • 50:01 - 50:04
    Birmingham was called Bombingham by people
  • 50:04 - 50:06
    in the civil rights movement
    because of this long chain
  • 50:06 - 50:08
    of unsolved bombings of black homes.
  • 50:09 - 50:10
    [Narrator]
    Much of the violence
  • 50:10 - 50:13
    was perpetrated by the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 50:13 - 50:16
    As evidenced in the beating
    of the Freedom Riders,
  • 50:16 - 50:18
    the city's law enforcement was known
  • 50:18 - 50:21
    for its working
    relationship with the Klan.
  • 50:22 - 50:26
    The Klan had more influence perhaps
  • 50:26 - 50:29
    in Birmingham than they did in a lot
  • 50:29 - 50:31
    of the other Southern cities,
  • 50:31 - 50:35
    and I think that contributed
    to the Klan's sense of bravado
  • 50:35 - 50:37
    where they felt like they
    could get away with anything,
  • 50:37 - 50:39
    that nobody'd hold them accountable.
  • 50:40 - 50:42
    [Narrator]
    In this charged atmosphere,
  • 50:42 - 50:46
    one of the cruelest of all
    acts of Klan terror occurred.
  • 50:48 - 50:51
    The 16th Street Baptist
    Church was a symbol
  • 50:51 - 50:53
    of the civil rights
    movement in Birmingham.
  • 50:53 - 50:55
    The sacred chambers served
  • 50:55 - 50:58
    as a staging point for demonstrations
  • 50:58 - 51:01
    against segregated
    downtown public facilities.
  • 51:02 - 51:06
    From the steps of the church,
    hundreds of black marchers,
  • 51:06 - 51:10
    most of them kids,
    encountered the extreme force
  • 51:10 - 51:13
    of Police Commissioner
    Bull Connor's attack dogs
  • 51:13 - 51:15
    and high-pressure fire hoses.
  • 51:15 - 51:17
    -[people screaming]
    -["Amazing Grace"]
  • 51:17 - 51:19
    For radical segregationists like the Klan,
  • 51:19 - 51:23
    the 16th Street Baptist Church
    became a special target.
  • 51:26 - 51:30
    On a hazy Sunday morning
    in September of 1963,
  • 51:30 - 51:33
    four young black girls
    attended Sunday school
  • 51:33 - 51:35
    at the 16th Street church.
  • 51:35 - 51:40
    The day's Bible lesson
    was a love that forgives.
  • 51:40 - 51:42
    The four girls moved to the basement
  • 51:42 - 51:44
    to don choir robes when suddenly,
  • 51:44 - 51:47
    a noise shot through the
    church like a cannon.
  • 51:47 - 51:48
    -[explosion booming]
    -[people screaming]
  • 51:48 - 51:51
    A bomb planted near the basement ripped
  • 51:51 - 51:52
    through the house of worship.
  • 51:53 - 51:54
    [fire truck siren wails]
  • 51:54 - 51:58
    Under an avalanche of
    shattered glass, toppled brick,
  • 51:58 - 52:01
    and tangled metal, a gruesome discovery.
  • 52:02 - 52:07
    Cynthia Wesley, age 14,
    Carole Robertson, age 14,
  • 52:08 - 52:13
    Addie Mae Collins, age 14,
    and Denise McNair, age 11,
  • 52:14 - 52:19
    all were found dead, their
    bodies buried a top one another.
  • 52:20 - 52:22
    Of all the bad things that happened
  • 52:23 - 52:25
    in the South during the civil rights era,
  • 52:25 - 52:27
    to me, that was the worst
  • 52:28 - 52:32
    because you had four innocent little girls
  • 52:32 - 52:35
    that hadn't done anything to anybody going
  • 52:35 - 52:38
    to worship on Sunday morning in church,
  • 52:39 - 52:42
    and they're killed for
    absolutely no reason
  • 52:42 - 52:44
    except that they were black.
  • 52:44 - 52:46
    -[slow somber music]
    -[church bells toll]
  • 52:46 - 52:47
    [Narrator]
    Within days,
  • 52:47 - 52:49
    police were almost certain the bombers
  • 52:49 - 52:52
    were members of the
    United Klans of America.
  • 52:52 - 52:56
    The key suspect was
    Dynamite Bob Chambliss,
  • 52:56 - 53:00
    a Klansman suspected in
    many Birmingham bombings.
  • 53:00 - 53:02
    [tense brooding music]
  • 53:02 - 53:04
    After a perfunctory investigation,
  • 53:04 - 53:07
    Chambliss and two other
    Klansmen were convicted only
  • 53:07 - 53:11
    of the minor charge of
    dynamite possession.
  • 53:11 - 53:15
    That finding was overturned on appeal.
  • 53:15 - 53:20
    An FBI investigation resulted
    in no arrest, no charges.
  • 53:20 - 53:25
    -["Amazing Grace"]
    -[tense brooding music]
  • 53:25 - 53:26
    [Announcer]
    "Ku Klux Klan: A secret History"
  • 53:26 - 53:28
    will return in a moment.
  • 53:30 - 53:32
    We continue our look
    inside the secret world
  • 53:32 - 53:34
    of the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 53:34 - 53:39
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 53:43 - 53:45
    -For my family!
    -For my family!
  • 53:45 - 53:47
    [Narrator]
    With a multiplicity of Klan groups
  • 53:47 - 53:50
    scattered throughout the South
    in the 1960s,
  • 53:50 - 53:51
    one of the most bloodthirsty
  • 53:51 - 53:54
    was the White Knights of Mississippi.
  • 53:54 - 53:56
    [tense brooding music]
  • 53:56 - 54:01
    The White Knights were led by
    Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers.
  • 54:01 - 54:05
    Hard line Klansmen of
    today still revere Bowers.
  • 54:05 - 54:09
    Sam Bowers, 300 wanton acts of terrorism,
  • 54:09 - 54:12
    bombs, bricks, and bullets, not bullshit,
  • 54:12 - 54:14
    bombs, bricks and bullets.
  • 54:14 - 54:15
    The greatest Klan leader that ever lived,
  • 54:15 - 54:17
    Samuel Holloway Bowers.
  • 54:18 - 54:22
    [Narrator]
    In 1964, Mississippi was a closed society.
  • 54:22 - 54:26
    Only 6% of the state's black populace
  • 54:26 - 54:28
    was registered to vote.
  • 54:28 - 54:31
    Most blacks lived in dire
    poverty and were subjected
  • 54:31 - 54:36
    to intolerable segregated
    public facilities.
  • 54:36 - 54:40
    A coalition of Northern civil
    rights groups called COFO,
  • 54:40 - 54:42
    the Council of Federated Organizations,
  • 54:42 - 54:45
    committed themselves to
    opening up Mississippi.
  • 54:46 - 54:48
    Civil rights organizations decided
  • 54:48 - 54:50
    to target it on the theory that if you
  • 54:50 - 54:52
    can break the back of segregation here,
  • 54:52 - 54:54
    you can certainly do it in other states
  • 54:54 - 54:57
    where the resistance is
    not as great and, by 1964,
  • 54:57 - 55:01
    had decided to bring almost
    1,000 young college students
  • 55:01 - 55:02
    for what was called Freedom Summer
  • 55:02 - 55:05
    to work on voter registration
    and community building.
  • 55:05 - 55:07
    Mississippi reacted as if it
  • 55:07 - 55:11
    were being invaded by Mongol hoards.
  • 55:11 - 55:14
    [Narrator]
    As the self appointed defender of Jim Crow,
  • 55:14 - 55:17
    the White Knights of
    Mississippi readied for war.
  • 55:17 - 55:21
    Imperial Wizard Bowers
    issued an executive directive
  • 55:21 - 55:24
    urging Klansmen to engage
    in clandestine violence
  • 55:24 - 55:26
    against COFO leaders.
  • 55:26 - 55:28
    -[tense bluesy rock music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 55:28 - 55:32
    The COFO leader the Klan
    targeted was Mickey Schwerner,
  • 55:32 - 55:36
    a 24-year-old civil rights
    activist from New York.
  • 55:36 - 55:38
    Schwerner had drawn the
    wrath of the White Knights
  • 55:38 - 55:41
    since coming to Mississippi
    as an advanced man
  • 55:41 - 55:43
    to set up COFO offices.
  • 55:44 - 55:46
    They said, "This guy's different."
  • 55:46 - 55:48
    First of all, he's Jewish,
    he's got a beard,
  • 55:48 - 55:51
    and you didn't have
    beards back in the 1960s,
  • 55:51 - 55:54
    and he's going against the social morays.
  • 55:54 - 55:56
    He's going to cafes where blacks go
  • 55:56 - 55:58
    and eating with blacks, staying
    in black people's homes,
  • 55:58 - 56:03
    and worst of all, he's an
    "outside nigger-lovin' agitator"
  • 56:03 - 56:05
    is the way I've heard him described.
  • 56:05 - 56:06
    [slow bluesy rock music]
  • 56:06 - 56:07
    [Narrator]
    Knowing the likelihood
  • 56:07 - 56:10
    of violent resistance was high,
  • 56:10 - 56:12
    Schwerner and two other
    Freedom Summer workers,
  • 56:12 - 56:17
    21-year-old Andrew Goodman
    and 21-year-old James Chaney,
  • 56:17 - 56:19
    set out for Mississippi.
  • 56:20 - 56:25
    On June 20, 1964, they
    inspected the charred remains
  • 56:25 - 56:27
    of the Mount Zion Baptist Church
  • 56:27 - 56:29
    near Philadelphia, Mississippi.
  • 56:29 - 56:31
    The church had been torched
    by the White Knights.
  • 56:34 - 56:37
    After leaving the church,
    the trio was arrested
  • 56:37 - 56:39
    on a fabricated charge of speeding
  • 56:39 - 56:43
    by Neshoba County Deputy
    Sheriff Cecil Price.
  • 56:43 - 56:47
    As the three young men sat
    nervously in their cells,
  • 56:47 - 56:49
    a Klan hit team assembled.
  • 56:51 - 56:53
    Approximately 10:30 that evening,
  • 56:53 - 56:56
    Schwerner, Goodman, and
    Chaney were released
  • 56:56 - 56:59
    and drove off into the Mississippi night.
  • 56:59 - 57:01
    They would never be seen alive again.
  • 57:03 - 57:07
    Within hours, COFO workers
    reported the trio missing,
  • 57:07 - 57:12
    but state authorities wrote the
    disappearance off as a hoax.
  • 57:12 - 57:14
    When word of the young men's disappearance
  • 57:14 - 57:15
    reached the White House,
  • 57:15 - 57:18
    President Johnson took
    an immediate interest.
  • 57:18 - 57:21
    J. Edgar Hoover was ordered
    to treat the incident
  • 57:21 - 57:22
    as a kidnapping.
  • 57:24 - 57:27
    The next day, a squad
    of FBI agents descended
  • 57:27 - 57:30
    upon the little town of
    Philadelphia, Mississippi.
  • 57:30 - 57:32
    Just one day after the disappearance,
  • 57:32 - 57:35
    J. Edgar Hoover called LBJ with news
  • 57:35 - 57:37
    of the first break in the case.
  • 57:40 - 57:41
    -Now, Mr. President.
    -Yeah.
  • 57:41 - 57:43
    [John]
    I wanted to let you know we found the car.
  • 57:43 - 57:46
    -Yeah?
    -Now this is not known.
  • 57:46 - 57:50
    Nobody knows this at all,
    but the car was burned,
  • 57:50 - 57:55
    and we do not know yet
    whether any bodies are inside
  • 57:55 - 57:57
    of the car because of the intense heat.
  • 57:57 - 57:59
    But I did want you to know that apparently
  • 57:59 - 58:02
    what's happened, these
    men have been killed.
  • 58:02 - 58:04
    [tense ethereal music]
  • 58:04 - 58:06
    [Narrator]
    The discovery of the burned car set
  • 58:06 - 58:10
    in motion and extensive FBI investigation.
  • 58:10 - 58:13
    Within two weeks of the disappearance,
  • 58:13 - 58:18
    153 FBI agents combed the
    area and interviewed locals.
  • 58:19 - 58:23
    Over 400 sailors drudged the
    swamps in search of the bodies.
  • 58:23 - 58:25
    [slow contemplative bluesy rock music]
  • 58:25 - 58:28
    The FBI began infiltrating
    the White Knights
  • 58:28 - 58:32
    by enlisting numerous
    Klansmen as paid informers.
  • 58:33 - 58:35
    The tactic paid off.
  • 58:35 - 58:37
    Six weeks after their disappearance,
  • 58:37 - 58:39
    a tip led agents to a
    farm where the bodies
  • 58:39 - 58:42
    of the civil rights
    workers were discovered,
  • 58:42 - 58:46
    buried in an earthen dam.
  • 58:46 - 58:48
    With information supplied from informants
  • 58:48 - 58:51
    and confessions from two Klansmen,
  • 58:51 - 58:53
    the FBI pieced together what had happened.
  • 58:53 - 58:57
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[police siren wails]
  • 58:57 - 59:00
    After the three victims
    left the jail house,
  • 59:00 - 59:02
    they were followed on a country road
  • 59:02 - 59:05
    by a Klan death squad and Deputy Price.
  • 59:07 - 59:10
    Forcing the young men's car to stop,
  • 59:10 - 59:11
    the deputy approach the trio
  • 59:11 - 59:14
    and ordered them into his patrol car.
  • 59:17 - 59:19
    The civil rights workers were then driven
  • 59:19 - 59:22
    to a secluded part of the woods.
  • 59:22 - 59:24
    [car humming]
  • 59:25 - 59:28
    One of the Klan members
    dragged Schwerner from the car.
  • 59:28 - 59:31
    "Are you that nigger lover?" he shouted
  • 59:31 - 59:33
    before shooting the victim at close range.
  • 59:33 - 59:35
    [gunshot blasts]
  • 59:35 - 59:38
    Andrew Goodman was pulled
    out next and coldly executed.
  • 59:40 - 59:40
    [gunshot blasts]
  • 59:40 - 59:45
    Another Klansman allegedly
    yelled, "Hey, save one for me."
  • 59:45 - 59:48
    James Chaney was dragged
    from the car and shot.
  • 59:48 - 59:49
    [gunshot blasts]
  • 59:49 - 59:51
    The shooter told his fellow Klansman,
  • 59:51 - 59:54
    "You didn't leave me
    anything but a nigger,
  • 59:54 - 59:56
    but at least I killed me a nigger."
  • 60:01 - 60:04
    The killing of these three
    civil rights workers just
  • 60:04 - 60:08
    shows the interrelationship
    of police and Klansmen.
  • 60:08 - 60:12
    Here are the people whose
    job it is to maintain order
  • 60:12 - 60:16
    and to protect the citizens
    kidnapping, beating,
  • 60:16 - 60:18
    and murdering the citizens.
  • 60:18 - 60:19
    [tense brooding music]
  • 60:19 - 60:22
    [Narrator]
    The FBI claimed 18 Klan members,
  • 60:22 - 60:26
    including Sheriff Lawrence
    Rainey and Deputy Cecil Price,
  • 60:26 - 60:28
    were responsible for the murders.
  • 60:30 - 60:34
    The state of Mississippi
    refused to bring indictments,
  • 60:34 - 60:37
    but the U.S. Justice
    Department would take action.
  • 60:38 - 60:41
    The sheriff, the deputy sheriff patrolmen
  • 60:41 - 60:42
    were involved in the crime,
  • 60:42 - 60:47
    and when the Klan
    operated under color law,
  • 60:47 - 60:51
    that is, use the mechanisms
    of the state law enforcement
  • 60:51 - 60:56
    to murder, then that gave the
    federal government a basis
  • 60:56 - 60:59
    on which to assert jurisdiction,
  • 60:59 - 61:02
    criminal jurisdiction against the people
  • 61:02 - 61:04
    that we believed were
    part of the conspiracy.
  • 61:04 - 61:06
    [dark brooding music]
  • 61:06 - 61:08
    [Narrator]
    Dusting off the Ku Klux acts
  • 61:08 - 61:10
    of the Reconstruction era,
  • 61:10 - 61:13
    the justice department
    sought federal indictments
  • 61:13 - 61:16
    against the Klansmen, accusing them
  • 61:16 - 61:20
    of depriving the three
    victims of their civil rights.
  • 61:21 - 61:23
    [slow tense discordant music]
  • 61:23 - 61:25
    Although Klan groups of the 1960s
  • 61:25 - 61:29
    did not wield the political
    power of their predecessors,
  • 61:29 - 61:33
    the Invisible Empire remained
    active in political matters.
  • 61:33 - 61:34
    [dark brooding music]
  • 61:34 - 61:38
    Klan members took firmly
    behind the elected officials
  • 61:38 - 61:40
    who mirrored their ideals.
  • 61:40 - 61:43
    I draw the line in the
    dust and toss the gauntlet
  • 61:43 - 61:48
    before the feet tyranny,
    and I say segregation now,
  • 61:48 - 61:52
    segregation tomorrow,
    and segregation forever.
  • 61:52 - 61:55
    [crowd cheering]
  • 61:56 - 61:58
    In the 1950s and 60s,
  • 61:58 - 62:00
    the political leaders George Wallace,
  • 62:00 - 62:02
    Ross Barnett of Mississippi,
  • 62:02 - 62:05
    Lester Maddox of Georgia,
    and these were people
  • 62:05 - 62:08
    who publicly took a stand against blacks.
  • 62:08 - 62:10
    And what is the Klansmen
    supposed to think,
  • 62:10 - 62:14
    "That if my leader, my state
    governor is doing this,
  • 62:14 - 62:16
    obviously he can't say,
    'Take a gun and shoot him.'
  • 62:16 - 62:19
    He probably means that,
    though, so I'll do it."
  • 62:19 - 62:20
    [men clapping]
  • 62:20 - 62:21
    [Narrator]
    Politicians on the other side
  • 62:21 - 62:24
    of the issue drew the wrath of the Klan.
  • 62:24 - 62:27
    Lyndon Johnson was abhorred by Klansmen.
  • 62:27 - 62:30
    He publicly took a stand against the Klan.
  • 62:30 - 62:32
    [dark brooding music]
  • 62:32 - 62:36
    My father fought them many
    long years ago in Texas,
  • 62:36 - 62:40
    and I have fought them all my
    life because I believe them
  • 62:40 - 62:44
    to threaten the peace of every
    community where they exist.
  • 62:44 - 62:49
    I shall continue to fight them
    because I know their loyalty
  • 62:50 - 62:52
    is not to the United States of America
  • 62:52 - 62:56
    but instead to a hooded society of bigots.
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    [dark brooding music]
  • 62:58 - 63:01
    [Narrator]
    Klan hatred of LBJ reached its zenith
  • 63:01 - 63:06
    on July 2, 1964 when he
    signed the Civil Rights Act.
  • 63:08 - 63:12
    Just nine days later, the
    Klan invoked Johnson's name
  • 63:12 - 63:14
    as they committed a brutal murder.
  • 63:16 - 63:19
    Lemuel Penn was a veteran of World War II
  • 63:19 - 63:22
    and a lieutenant colonel
    in the Army Reserves.
  • 63:23 - 63:25
    As he and two other soldiers drove
  • 63:25 - 63:29
    down a desolate stretch
    of Georgia highway,
  • 63:29 - 63:32
    Penn was shot and killed by three members
  • 63:32 - 63:35
    of the United Klans of America.
  • 63:35 - 63:38
    Klansman James Lackey later confessed
  • 63:38 - 63:41
    that when they spotted the three
    black soldiers on the road,
  • 63:41 - 63:44
    one of the Klansmen
    said, "They must be some
  • 63:44 - 63:45
    of President Johnson's boys.
  • 63:45 - 63:47
    I'm going to kill me a nigger."
  • 63:47 - 63:51
    [dark unsettling music]
  • 63:52 - 63:55
    As so often happened in
    the previous 100 years,
  • 63:55 - 64:00
    an all-white jury found
    the Klansmen not guilty.
  • 64:00 - 64:03
    This is the phenomenon
    of jury nullification.
  • 64:03 - 64:06
    The jury hears the evidence,
    it's fairly conclusive,
  • 64:06 - 64:11
    he did it, there's proof,
    witnesses, testimony,
  • 64:11 - 64:16
    and because what he did is
    popular among the jurors
  • 64:16 - 64:19
    or fits into the worldview
    of the jurors themselves,
  • 64:19 - 64:22
    at a period in the South,
    all white and all men,
  • 64:22 - 64:24
    then the perpetrator is let free,
  • 64:24 - 64:26
    let free with the blessings of the jury
  • 64:26 - 64:29
    and the blessings of the
    society from which the juror
  • 64:29 - 64:31
    and the defendant are commonly drawn.
  • 64:31 - 64:32
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[birds chirping]
  • 64:32 - 64:34
    [Narrator] As was the case in Mississippi,
  • 64:34 - 64:36
    the Justice Department
    appealed to the Supreme Court
  • 64:36 - 64:39
    for permission to prosecute the Klansmen
  • 64:39 - 64:42
    for violation of Penn's civil rights.
  • 64:46 - 64:49
    The depth to which the
    FBI infiltrated the Klan
  • 64:49 - 64:52
    was demonstrated by another tragic killing
  • 64:52 - 64:53
    on a lonely highway.
  • 64:53 - 64:55
    -[flames crackle]
    -[muffled speaking]
  • 64:55 - 65:00
    On March 25th, 1965,
    12,000 protestors gathered
  • 65:00 - 65:02
    in Montgomery, Alabama.
  • 65:02 - 65:04
    It was the successful conclusion
  • 65:04 - 65:07
    of the Selma to Montgomery
    March for black voting rights.
  • 65:07 - 65:11
    -[crowd singing]
    -[tense music]
  • 65:11 - 65:14
    That evening, Viola Liuzzo,
  • 65:14 - 65:18
    a 39-year-old woman from
    Detroit and mother of five,
  • 65:18 - 65:20
    shuttled demonstrators back to Selma.
  • 65:21 - 65:23
    Four Klansmen spotted Liuzzo
  • 65:23 - 65:25
    and the black men traveling together.
  • 65:26 - 65:31
    They chased the pair
    down. Shots were fired.
  • 65:31 - 65:34
    [gunshots blasting]
  • 65:34 - 65:37
    Liuzzo was struck in the head and killed.
  • 65:37 - 65:39
    Her passenger survived.
  • 65:39 - 65:41
    [tense brooding music]
  • 65:41 - 65:45
    Unlike previous FBI
    investigations of Klan crimes
  • 65:45 - 65:48
    that took weeks or months to solve,
  • 65:48 - 65:51
    the Liuzzo murder was
    closed with amazing speed.
  • 65:51 - 65:54
    The day after the murder,
    President Johnson went
  • 65:54 - 65:56
    on national television
    with an announcement.
  • 65:57 - 66:01
    Arrests were made a few minutes ago
  • 66:02 - 66:06
    of four Ku Klux Klan members
    in Birmingham, Alabama,
  • 66:06 - 66:11
    charging them with conspiracy
    to violate the civil rights
  • 66:11 - 66:13
    of the murdered woman.
  • 66:14 - 66:16
    Mrs. Liuzzo went to Alabama
  • 66:16 - 66:19
    to serve the struggles for justice.
  • 66:19 - 66:22
    She was murdered by the
    enemies of justice who,
  • 66:22 - 66:27
    for decades, have used
    the rope and the gun
  • 66:27 - 66:32
    and the tar and the feathers
    to terrorize their neighbors.
  • 66:32 - 66:36
    So if Klansmen hear my voice today,
  • 66:36 - 66:40
    let it be both an appeal and a warning
  • 66:41 - 66:45
    to get out of the Ku Klux Klan now
  • 66:45 - 66:50
    and return to a decent
    society before it is too late.
  • 66:50 - 66:52
    [slow bluesy rock music]
  • 66:52 - 66:54
    [Narrator]
    Johnson failed to mention the reason
  • 66:54 - 66:57
    the FBI was able to solve the
    murder with such haste.
  • 66:57 - 67:01
    Gary Rowe, one of the
    four Klansmen in the car,
  • 67:01 - 67:04
    was a paid FBI informant.
  • 67:06 - 67:08
    Three Klansmen were indicted for murder.
  • 67:10 - 67:14
    Their trial ended when an
    all-white all-male jury
  • 67:14 - 67:15
    could not reach a verdict.
  • 67:17 - 67:20
    A second trial resulted
    in not guilty verdicts.
  • 67:21 - 67:24
    As in previous cases, the
    Justice Department prepared
  • 67:24 - 67:26
    to attempt federal indictments.
  • 67:28 - 67:30
    [Announcer]
    "Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History"
  • 67:30 - 67:31
    will return in a moment.
  • 67:32 - 67:37
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 67:40 - 67:41
    [Narrator]
    As Klan victims in the war
  • 67:41 - 67:45
    against integration piled up,
    efforts to prosecute Klansmen
  • 67:45 - 67:48
    on federal charges began to pay off.
  • 67:49 - 67:54
    In late 1965, three Klansmen
    were convicted and sentenced
  • 67:54 - 67:57
    to 10 years in prison for
    violating the civil rights
  • 67:57 - 67:59
    of Viola Liuzzo.
  • 67:59 - 68:01
    -[up-tempo percussive music]
    -[gavel bangs]
  • 68:01 - 68:05
    Two years after the vicious
    murder of Colonel Lemuel Penn,
  • 68:05 - 68:07
    two members of the UKA were convicted
  • 68:07 - 68:10
    of violating the veteran's civil rights.
  • 68:11 - 68:12
    [gavel bangs]
  • 68:12 - 68:16
    In October of 1967, 18
    members of the White Knights
  • 68:16 - 68:19
    of Mississippi stood trial for conspiring
  • 68:19 - 68:22
    to deny Mickey Schwerner, Andrew Goodman,
  • 68:22 - 68:26
    and James Chaney of their civil rights.
  • 68:26 - 68:28
    Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers
  • 68:28 - 68:32
    and six other Klansmen were found guilty.
  • 68:32 - 68:36
    Bowers was sentenced to
    the maximum, 10 years.
  • 68:38 - 68:41
    The White Knights of
    Mississippi fell into disarray.
  • 68:42 - 68:45
    The combination of lengthy FBI probes,
  • 68:45 - 68:50
    congressional inquiries, and
    Bower's incarceration fatally
  • 68:50 - 68:53
    crippled the most violent
    Klan group in the South.
  • 68:56 - 68:58
    The House on American
    Activities Committee,
  • 68:58 - 69:02
    which had investigated the Klan in 1965,
  • 69:02 - 69:06
    released its report in 1967.
  • 69:06 - 69:10
    It stated what most in the
    South had known for 100 years.
  • 69:11 - 69:13
    "We are forced to the conclusion
  • 69:13 - 69:17
    that the traditionally ugly
    image of the Ku Klux Klan
  • 69:17 - 69:21
    is essentially valid,
    preaching love and peace
  • 69:21 - 69:24
    yet practicing hatred and violence,
  • 69:24 - 69:27
    claiming fidelity to the Constitution,
  • 69:27 - 69:32
    yet systematically abrogating
    the rights of other citizens.
  • 69:32 - 69:35
    Their record seems clearly
    one of moral bankruptcy
  • 69:35 - 69:38
    and staggering hypocrisy."
  • 69:38 - 69:41
    [Klansmen singing]
  • 69:41 - 69:43
    By the end of the 1960s,
  • 69:43 - 69:47
    the Ku Klux Klan was a conquered force.
  • 69:47 - 69:48
    The Klan had lost the battle
  • 69:48 - 69:51
    against the civil rights movement.
  • 69:51 - 69:53
    The Klan was brought down
    in a variety of ways,
  • 69:53 - 69:55
    primarily through the
    success of the movement.
  • 69:55 - 69:57
    They proved to be ineffective.
  • 69:57 - 69:59
    They kill people, they murdered people,
  • 69:59 - 69:59
    they intimidated people,
  • 69:59 - 70:03
    but they could not stop this
    on-rushing tide of freedom.
  • 70:03 - 70:04
    They just couldn't stop it,
  • 70:04 - 70:07
    and they could not serve the purpose they
  • 70:07 - 70:09
    told people they were serving.
  • 70:09 - 70:10
    [slow contemplative music]
  • 70:10 - 70:12
    [Narrator]
    As the decayed came to a close,
  • 70:12 - 70:15
    there were scores of final acts attributed
  • 70:15 - 70:20
    to the Klan that remained
    unsolved and unprosecuted.
  • 70:20 - 70:22
    The cruelest of these was the bombing
  • 70:22 - 70:25
    of Birmingham 16th Street Baptist Church.
  • 70:26 - 70:30
    Bill Baxley recalls the
    day in 1963 when the lives
  • 70:30 - 70:34
    of four innocent black
    girls came to a violent end.
  • 70:34 - 70:35
    -[muffled speaking on radio]
    -[ambulance siren wails]
  • 70:35 - 70:37
    When it happened, I was
    a student in law school,
  • 70:37 - 70:38
    and I got physically ill,
  • 70:38 - 70:41
    and I hoped from that moment forward
  • 70:41 - 70:45
    that I might do something
    somewhere someday
  • 70:45 - 70:48
    to help bring whoever did this to justice.
  • 70:50 - 70:52
    [Narrator]
    Baxley's chance came in 1970
  • 70:52 - 70:55
    when he was elected
    Alabama's attorney general.
  • 70:55 - 71:00
    Within a week of being sworn
    in, Baxley reopened the case.
  • 71:00 - 71:02
    [slow dramatic music]
  • 71:02 - 71:06
    Over the course of a grueling
    seven-year investigation,
  • 71:06 - 71:09
    Baxley zeroed in on the original suspect,
  • 71:09 - 71:11
    Klansman Dynamite Bob Chambliss.
  • 71:14 - 71:18
    Baxley's aggressive style won
    him no friends among the Klan.
  • 71:19 - 71:22
    When the attorney general
    received a racist letter
  • 71:22 - 71:25
    protesting his continued investigation,
  • 71:25 - 71:28
    Baxley replied on
    official state letterhead,
  • 71:28 - 71:32
    "My response to your
    letter of February 19, 1976
  • 71:32 - 71:34
    is kiss my ass."
  • 71:34 - 71:36
    [bluesy rock music]
  • 71:36 - 71:41
    In 1977, Bill Baxley met
    Dynamite Bob Chambliss
  • 71:41 - 71:42
    in a court of law.
  • 71:45 - 71:49
    15 years after the brutal
    killing of four young girls,
  • 71:49 - 71:53
    an Alabama jury found
    Chambliss guilty of murder.
  • 71:53 - 71:56
    He was sent to prison where he died.
  • 71:56 - 71:58
    [tense music]
  • 71:58 - 72:02
    In 1974, the Klan's national membership
  • 72:02 - 72:05
    was estimated to be only 1,500.
  • 72:05 - 72:07
    But new faces would arise from the ashes
  • 72:07 - 72:11
    and lead the Klan to yet another revival.
  • 72:14 - 72:16
    [Announcer]
    "Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History"
  • 72:16 - 72:18
    will return in a moment
    here on the History Channel.
  • 72:19 - 72:21
    The History Channel returns
  • 72:21 - 72:23
    to Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History."
  • 72:23 - 72:28
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 72:34 - 72:36
    [Narrator]
    With sanctioned segregation a relic
  • 72:36 - 72:39
    of the past, a debilitated Klan searched
  • 72:39 - 72:41
    for new issues to battle.
  • 72:41 - 72:44
    In the 1970s, they seized
    upon the controversies
  • 72:44 - 72:48
    of affirmative action,
    reverse discrimination,
  • 72:48 - 72:49
    and forced busing.
  • 72:51 - 72:54
    The Klan exploited these
    issues at public rallies
  • 72:54 - 72:57
    but were often met with
    violent opposition.
  • 72:57 - 73:00
    [muffled shouting]
  • 73:00 - 73:05
    -[people scuffling]
    -[crowd roaring]
  • 73:10 - 73:11
    [muffled shouting]
  • 73:11 - 73:14
    [Man]
    Hey, hey, hey, hey!
  • 73:14 - 73:15
    We do not want any trouble.
  • 73:15 - 73:17
    We just want the plan to go!
  • 73:17 - 73:20
    Well, we will not have it.
    We will not tolerate it.
  • 73:20 - 73:21
    If we have to die here, we'll die here,
  • 73:21 - 73:25
    but there will not be any
    Klan today, tomorrow, never!
  • 73:25 - 73:26
    Death to the Klan!
  • 73:26 - 73:29
    [muffled shouting]
  • 73:29 - 73:33
    [Narrator]
    The Klan was crippled and in need of guidance.
  • 73:33 - 73:37
    They found a new brand
    of leader in David Duke.
  • 73:37 - 73:38
    And they had to fight for.
  • 73:38 - 73:41
    [Narrator]
    Duke was not a typical Klansman.
  • 73:41 - 73:44
    He rarely wore robes, never donned a hood.
  • 73:44 - 73:48
    He seldom was caught
    using racial epithets.
  • 73:49 - 73:51
    College educated and good looking,
  • 73:51 - 73:54
    Duke set out to clean up
    the image of the Klan.
  • 73:55 - 73:58
    Well, we're not anti black
    so much as we're pro white.
  • 73:58 - 74:01
    And there's a thousand
    different organizations,
  • 74:01 - 74:03
    it seems like, that are
    working for the interest
  • 74:03 - 74:05
    of the blacks and other minorities.
  • 74:05 - 74:07
    And we're simply an
    organization that's working
  • 74:07 - 74:09
    for the interest and the ideals
  • 74:09 - 74:10
    and the culture of the white people.
  • 74:10 - 74:14
    He's really the embodiment
    of the modern Klan.
  • 74:14 - 74:16
    He's the white-collar,
    button-down, well-dressed,
  • 74:16 - 74:21
    pressed Klan, and he does a
    great deal to revive the image
  • 74:21 - 74:24
    of the Klan to make it
    seem not quite so bad.
  • 74:24 - 74:26
    These are not really bad
    people. Look at David Duke.
  • 74:26 - 74:29
    He could be the boy next door.
    He is the Klan next door.
  • 74:31 - 74:34
    [Narrator]
    As Duke work to build a political empire,
  • 74:34 - 74:37
    many of his top lieutenants grew critical
  • 74:37 - 74:40
    of their leader's media attention.
  • 74:40 - 74:44
    Some deserted and formed
    their own more militant Klans.
  • 74:44 - 74:48
    Incidents of Klan-related
    violence increased.
  • 74:48 - 74:51
    [people screaming]
  • 74:51 - 74:55
    The most shocking incident
    of Klan vengeance took place
  • 74:55 - 74:58
    in Greensboro, North Carolina.
  • 74:58 - 75:00
    On November 3rd, 1979,
  • 75:00 - 75:04
    members of the Communist
    Workers' Party prepared
  • 75:04 - 75:06
    for an anti-Klan rally.
  • 75:06 - 75:08
    [Unison] Death to the
    Klan! Death to the Klan!
  • 75:08 - 75:10
    Death to the Klan! Death to the Klan!
  • 75:10 - 75:11
    [Narrator]
    An alliance of Klansmen
  • 75:11 - 75:15
    and Nazi party members arrived by caravan.
  • 75:15 - 75:18
    Insults escalated into fisticuffs.
  • 75:18 - 75:21
    Moments later, Klansmen
    inflicted deadly vengeance
  • 75:21 - 75:23
    upon their rivals.
  • 75:23 - 75:28
    -[gunshots blasting]
    -[people yelling]
  • 75:32 - 75:37
    -[gunshots blasting]
    -[people yelling]
  • 75:50 - 75:52
    [gunshots blasting]
  • 75:52 - 75:55
    [engine revving]
  • 76:03 - 76:06
    [muffled shouting]
  • 76:08 - 76:10
    -Hey, come on and help us!
    -Sorry!
  • 76:10 - 76:11
    [muffled shouting]
  • 76:11 - 76:13
    [Narrator]
    Five members of the Communist Workers' Party
  • 76:13 - 76:15
    were fatally wounded.
  • 76:15 - 76:19
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[muffled shouting]
  • 76:19 - 76:23
    A jury decided the shooters
    acted in self defense.
  • 76:24 - 76:28
    The murders in Greensboro really
  • 76:28 - 76:31
    shocked the civil rights community
  • 76:31 - 76:35
    into an awareness that the
    Klan had not gone away.
  • 76:37 - 76:42
    And this event was one
    of the most shocking
  • 76:42 - 76:44
    and violent incidents connected
  • 76:44 - 76:47
    with the revival of the fourth-era Klan.
  • 76:47 - 76:49
    [dark brooding music]
  • 76:49 - 76:51
    [Narrator]
    In the early 1980s,
  • 76:51 - 76:53
    many Klansmen traded in their robes
  • 76:53 - 76:57
    for the camouflage fatigues
    of a paramilitary uniform.
  • 76:57 - 76:59
    [tense ethereal music]
  • 76:59 - 77:01
    Texas Klan leader Louis Beam
  • 77:01 - 77:04
    opened paramilitary training camps.
  • 77:05 - 77:09
    So Louis Beam, he was the
    bridge between the Klan
  • 77:09 - 77:14
    of the past and the
    extremist domestic terrorist
  • 77:14 - 77:16
    of the present and the future,
  • 77:16 - 77:17
    and that would be the militia's
  • 77:17 - 77:20
    so-called patriot
    movement in America today.
  • 77:20 - 77:25
    He had as many as 3,000
    armed people training
  • 77:25 - 77:28
    in five separate training camps in Texas
  • 77:28 - 77:31
    for a day that that would be
    a revolution and a race war.
  • 77:33 - 77:38
    -[dark brooding music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 77:43 - 77:45
    [Narrator]
    As the Klan gained strength,
  • 77:45 - 77:47
    several organizations fought back.
  • 77:47 - 77:50
    The most influential of
    the Klan monitoring groups
  • 77:50 - 77:53
    was started by the Southern
    Poverty Law Center.
  • 77:54 - 77:57
    After representing a black victim injured
  • 77:57 - 78:01
    in a 1979 Klan melee in Decatur, Alabama,
  • 78:01 - 78:03
    the law center's executive director,
  • 78:03 - 78:06
    Morris Dees, created Klan Watch.
  • 78:06 - 78:08
    So I decided after we did the case
  • 78:08 - 78:11
    to see if we couldn't
    set up an organization
  • 78:11 - 78:15
    to debunk this whole
    thing about this new Klan
  • 78:15 - 78:17
    and to show it was
    simply just the old Klan
  • 78:17 - 78:19
    with new rhetoric.
  • 78:19 - 78:20
    They still resort to violence.
  • 78:20 - 78:22
    [tense music]
  • 78:22 - 78:24
    [Narrator]
    Klan Watch tracked Klan activities
  • 78:24 - 78:27
    and pursued litigation of Klan crimes.
  • 78:29 - 78:31
    The most important case in Dee's fight
  • 78:31 - 78:34
    against the Klan resulted in the demise
  • 78:34 - 78:37
    of the longest-lasting
    Klan group in America,
  • 78:40 - 78:42
    Robert Shelton's United Klans of America,
  • 78:42 - 78:46
    where terror personified in the 1960s.
  • 78:47 - 78:49
    But unlike other Klans of that era
  • 78:49 - 78:53
    which succumb to investigations
    and prosecutions,
  • 78:53 - 78:56
    the UKA manage to survive.
  • 78:56 - 78:58
    [muffled speaking over loudspeaker]
  • 78:58 - 79:02
    But in March of 1981,
    the unraveling began.
  • 79:02 - 79:05
    Several members of the
    Mobile, Alabama chapter
  • 79:05 - 79:09
    of the UKA were enraged
    after the court case
  • 79:09 - 79:11
    of a black man accused in the murder
  • 79:11 - 79:15
    of a white police officer
    ended in a mistrial.
  • 79:15 - 79:17
    [gavel bangs]
  • 79:17 - 79:22
    Bennie Hays, the titan of UKA
    Unit 900 was quoted as saying,
  • 79:22 - 79:26
    "If a black man can get away
    with killing a white man,
  • 79:26 - 79:29
    we oughta be able to get away
    with killing a black man."
  • 79:31 - 79:34
    That night, two young Klansmen,
  • 79:34 - 79:38
    17-year-old Tiger Knowles
    and 26-year-old Henry Hays,
  • 79:38 - 79:42
    went looking for a black
    victim, any black victim.
  • 79:43 - 79:46
    While cruising the streets of Mobile,
  • 79:46 - 79:50
    they found 19-year-old Michael Donald.
  • 79:50 - 79:51
    The young man was kidnapped
  • 79:51 - 79:54
    and driven to a desolate
    spot in the woods.
  • 79:55 - 79:57
    They got the rope around his neck,
  • 79:57 - 80:00
    and they put their boot up
    against either side of his head,
  • 80:00 - 80:01
    pulled on that rope till there
  • 80:01 - 80:03
    wasn't any breath left in him,
  • 80:03 - 80:04
    and then, to make sure he was dead,
  • 80:04 - 80:06
    they took a razor knife
    and slit his throat,
  • 80:06 - 80:08
    threw him in the trunk of the car,
  • 80:08 - 80:12
    carried him back over, and
    hung him from a tree in Mobile.
  • 80:12 - 80:15
    It was a lynching of its classic sense.
  • 80:15 - 80:18
    [slow ethereal music]
  • 80:18 - 80:20
    [Narrator]
    The crime shocked the community.
  • 80:20 - 80:23
    The barbaric murder of
    this innocent young man
  • 80:23 - 80:27
    was as vicious, devious, as hideous as any
  • 80:27 - 80:30
    in the long history of the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 80:33 - 80:36
    Based on Tiger Knowles's confession,
  • 80:36 - 80:39
    he and his accomplice
    were convicted of murder.
  • 80:39 - 80:42
    To most, it appeared the case was closed.
  • 80:43 - 80:45
    Morris Dees felt differently.
  • 80:45 - 80:47
    [tense brooding music]
  • 80:47 - 80:51
    He encouraged the victim's
    mother, Beulah Mae Donald,
  • 80:51 - 80:55
    to file a civil lawsuit against
    the United Klans of America.
  • 80:57 - 81:02
    Because you K leaders encouraged
    violent and murderous acts,
  • 81:02 - 81:06
    Dees theorized the Klan
    organization was also liable.
  • 81:06 - 81:09
    Mrs. Donald agreed to the lawsuit.
  • 81:10 - 81:14
    The 1987 trial lasted but four days.
  • 81:14 - 81:17
    Several Klansmen testified
    they had been directed
  • 81:17 - 81:21
    to commit acts of
    harassment and intimidation.
  • 81:21 - 81:24
    Tiger Knowles described the
    murder of Michael Donald
  • 81:24 - 81:27
    and told how the Klan had encouraged him
  • 81:27 - 81:29
    to commit acts of violence.
  • 81:32 - 81:34
    As he stepped down from the stand,
  • 81:34 - 81:38
    the judge allowed the
    Klansman to address the court.
  • 81:38 - 81:41
    Then he turned to Mrs.
    Donald and spoke her name,
  • 81:43 - 81:45
    and he began to cry,
    and his lips quivered,
  • 81:45 - 81:48
    and he started sobbing
    and said, basically,
  • 81:48 - 81:50
    he begged her forgiveness for what he
  • 81:50 - 81:52
    had done to her son, Michael.
  • 81:52 - 81:55
    And she just rocked back in her chair
  • 81:55 - 82:00
    and looked at him there,
    and it was a low whisper.
  • 82:00 - 82:01
    She said to him in front of that jury.
  • 82:01 - 82:04
    She said, "I've already forgiven you,"
  • 82:05 - 82:08
    and it was a pretty powerful moment,
  • 82:08 - 82:10
    as you can imagine, in that courtroom.
  • 82:10 - 82:12
    There wasn't a dry eye, I promise you.
  • 82:12 - 82:14
    Our counsel table and in that jury box,
  • 82:14 - 82:16
    and I saw that old
    judge brush back a tear.
  • 82:17 - 82:20
    [Narrator]
    The jury returned after just four hours
  • 82:20 - 82:25
    of deliberation and announced
    a stunning $7 million verdict
  • 82:25 - 82:28
    against the United Klans of America.
  • 82:28 - 82:31
    The most durable of all Klan groups
  • 82:31 - 82:35
    had been destroyed by a Southern jury.
  • 82:35 - 82:37
    The Klan really just had
    a national headquarters,
  • 82:37 - 82:40
    7,000 square foot building
    and 10 acres of land,
  • 82:40 - 82:43
    and that's about it, and
    that's what Mrs. Donald got.
  • 82:43 - 82:46
    A black woman ended up with a deed
  • 82:46 - 82:47
    to the property of the most dangerous
  • 82:47 - 82:51
    and violent Klan organization
    in modern history.
  • 82:51 - 82:53
    [muffled speaking]
  • 82:53 - 82:54
    [Narrator]
    The Donald judgment
  • 82:54 - 82:57
    was a critical blow to Klans everywhere.
  • 82:58 - 83:01
    Sporadic incidents of violence continued,
  • 83:01 - 83:03
    but Klansmen realized there was a lot
  • 83:03 - 83:06
    to lose by pursuing terror.
  • 83:06 - 83:10
    They could lose their money,
    their freedom, even their life.
  • 83:10 - 83:12
    -[tense music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 83:12 - 83:17
    On June 6th, 1997,
    Henry Hayes was executed
  • 83:18 - 83:20
    for the murder of Michael Donald.
  • 83:21 - 83:24
    He was the first Klansman
    in modern history to be put
  • 83:24 - 83:29
    to death for the Klan murder
    of an African American.
  • 83:30 - 83:32
    [prison bars clang]
  • 83:32 - 83:37
    -[slow tense discordant music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 83:40 - 83:42
    [Klansman]
    We're supposed to.
  • 83:42 - 83:46
    [Narrator]
    With a national membership of just over 5,000,
  • 83:46 - 83:51
    the Ku Klux Klan today is but
    a shadow of its former self.
  • 83:51 - 83:54
    Gone are the days when it
    wielded great political
  • 83:54 - 83:56
    and social power.
  • 83:56 - 83:59
    Gone are the days when it
    could commit wanton acts
  • 83:59 - 84:02
    of terror without fear of censure.
  • 84:02 - 84:04
    But the legacy of the Klan remains.
  • 84:04 - 84:07
    Today, you can see a number of groups
  • 84:07 - 84:09
    who are like the klansmen,
  • 84:09 - 84:12
    but they simply are not
    wearing the white sheets.
  • 84:13 - 84:17
    They take the same stance. They
    believe in the same things.
  • 84:17 - 84:18
    They are willing to commit violence.
  • 84:18 - 84:20
    They just don't wear the sheets
  • 84:20 - 84:23
    because the sheets now look silly.
  • 84:23 - 84:24
    ["Amazing Grace"]
  • 84:24 - 84:27
    [Narrator] History suggests
    the Klan will not disappear.
  • 84:27 - 84:31
    They have died many
    deaths only to be reborn
  • 84:31 - 84:34
    whenever many in white
    America felt threatened,
  • 84:35 - 84:38
    reawakened as the ideals of intolerance
  • 84:38 - 84:43
    and racial superiority are
    taught to succeeding generations.
  • 84:43 - 84:46
    -[dogs barking in background]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 84:46 - 84:48
    You people see what I got my arms?
  • 84:49 - 84:52
    This is what this organization is about,
  • 84:52 - 84:55
    our children, our children's children.
  • 84:55 - 84:57
    Each and every one of yous take a look
  • 84:57 - 84:59
    at this pure white baby.
  • 84:59 - 85:01
    It's the most beautiful
    thing in the world.
  • 85:02 - 85:04
    You raise your children
    as white Christians.
  • 85:04 - 85:07
    [dark brooding music]
  • 85:07 - 85:10
    It's just really sad because
    here you're taking kids
  • 85:10 - 85:14
    who presumably are innocent,
    who grow up trusting others,
  • 85:14 - 85:16
    who don't have any preconceived notion
  • 85:16 - 85:19
    about who other people are,
    and indoctrinating them
  • 85:19 - 85:22
    in this Nazi, this fascists philosophy.
  • 85:23 - 85:27
    It's just horrific to think of
    poisoning these little minds.
  • 85:27 - 85:30
    [Narrator]
    Whether at the peak of power or barely afloat,
  • 85:30 - 85:35
    the Klan philosophy of hatred,
    of violence has endured
  • 85:35 - 85:39
    since its beginnings in
    a small Tennessee town.
  • 85:39 - 85:42
    We still will not mix up with
    a bunch of black savages.
  • 85:42 - 85:45
    I'm not wanting any freeloading
    niggers out here living
  • 85:45 - 85:47
    on Granite Road in the housing projects.
  • 85:47 - 85:49
    They were brought here as slaves.
  • 85:49 - 85:51
    The only that they're free is
  • 85:51 - 85:52
    because there's some liberal teaching,
  • 85:52 - 85:56
    Jew-minded idiots that
    decided to free 'em.
  • 85:56 - 85:58
    And we're simply an
    organization that's working
  • 85:58 - 86:00
    for the interest and the ideals
  • 86:00 - 86:01
    and the culture of the white people.
  • 86:01 - 86:04
    Look out, nigger! The
    Klan is getting bigger!
  • 86:04 - 86:06
    -White power!
    -White power!
  • 86:06 - 86:08
    -White power!
    -White power!
  • 86:08 - 86:11
    -White power!
    -White power!
  • 86:11 - 86:13
    [dark brooding music]
  • 86:13 - 86:15
    I'll tell you this.
  • 86:15 - 86:18
    The Klan's here because we've
    been here for 131 years.
  • 86:18 - 86:22
    The legacy is that we've
    had a lot of hangings,
  • 86:22 - 86:25
    a lot of bombings, a lot of shootings.
  • 86:25 - 86:26
    That don't bother me at all.
  • 86:28 - 86:29
    If somebody wants to go out here
  • 86:29 - 86:32
    and kill a nigger or something, I don't...
  • 86:32 - 86:33
    They're not are equal.
  • 86:33 - 86:37
    They have no right to
    breathe free air in America.
  • 86:37 - 86:40
    This is not the Boy Scouts.
    This ain't the Cub Scouts.
  • 86:40 - 86:41
    This is the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 86:41 - 86:44
    If you don't like what
    we're saying, then go away.
  • 86:45 - 86:48
    You know who we are. You
    know what our history is.
  • 86:48 - 86:49
    [flames crackle]
  • 86:49 - 86:52
    I don't know if you can
    count up the list of victims.
  • 86:52 - 86:53
    There's no list available.
  • 86:53 - 86:56
    It's the hundreds of thousands, I'd guess,
  • 86:56 - 86:59
    of people physically intimidated, killed,
  • 86:59 - 87:01
    maimed, butchered, burned out, terrorized,
  • 87:01 - 87:04
    and the list just goes on and on and on.
  • 87:04 - 87:06
    But what they do is upset the fabric
  • 87:06 - 87:08
    of what we hope is
    going to be a democracy,
  • 87:08 - 87:11
    a place where everyone
    has his or her place
  • 87:11 - 87:14
    and a place where everyone's
    voice is at least listened to.
  • 87:14 - 87:17
    They can't tolerate
    that, and by their acts,
  • 87:17 - 87:19
    they've disrupted the
    fabric of our democracy.
  • 87:19 - 87:21
    They've made it less than perfect.
  • 87:21 - 87:22
    They've done a great deal
  • 87:22 - 87:24
    to disrupt the peaceful
    development of this country.
  • 87:25 - 87:27
    [Narrator] The Ku Klux Klan
  • 87:27 - 87:29
    is America's first society of hate.
  • 87:29 - 87:33
    Although diminished, the
    Klan can not be ignored.
  • 87:33 - 87:37
    Their bigotry lies
    bubbling under the surface,
  • 87:37 - 87:39
    eager to rise at any moment to battle
  • 87:39 - 87:42
    against racial equality.
  • 87:42 - 87:47
    -[tense brooding music]
    -[flames crackle]
  • 87:48 - 87:52
    [dramatic music]
  • 87:52 - 87:54
    [Announcer]
    Ten riveting films,
  • 87:55 - 88:00
    10 award-winning filmmakers,
    one unprecedented event.
  • 88:01 - 88:05
    "10 Days That Unexpectedly
    Changed America,"
  • 88:05 - 88:08
    all this week at nine, only
    on The History Channel.
Title:
Ku Klux Klan - A Secret History
Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:28:08

English subtitles

Revisions